Hindu Nationalism
Hindu Nationalism
Abstract
This article reflects on the relationship between Hindu nationalism and democracy and how the former
emerges from within democracy only to subvert it. The essay outlines important conceptual issues in
the relationship between Hindu nationalism and democracy, discusses the relationship between the
idea of a ‘Hindu Rashtra’ and ‘Hindu Rajya’, and delves into the complex interplay between Hindu
nationalism and caste. This article ultimately argues that Hindu nationalism’s alignment with authori-
tarianism in a political style does not simply corrode democracy, but it also undermines all values. The
objective of this analysis is not to provide a comprehensive explanation of the rise of Hindu nationalism,
as much as to reflect on the ways in which its ideology operates at multiple levels.
Keyword
India, Hindu nationalism, BJP, secularism, democracy, authoritarianism
Introduction
On 5 August 2020 Prime Minister Narendra Modi did the bhumi pujan (land worship) for the construction
of the Ram temple at Ayodhya. This moment symbolically signalled the arrival of Hindu Rashtra. The
grand spectacle of a regal of Narendra Modi performing the religious rites for the temple was, at a
symbolic level, the recreation of an ancient ideal of kingship. Modi was not just consecrating the temple.
He was enacting a new form of political power: A monarchical protector of the faith of the community
performing one of the traditional functions of Hindu kingship, which was to consecrate and protect
temples.
That moment also crystallized the project of Hindu nationalism and the transformation of Indian
politics in the starkest terms. Every theme central to Hindu nationalism was present in the Prime
Minister’s speech (The Indian Express, 2020). He signalled that Hindu nationalism is, in the first
instance, constituted by a historical memory: a construction of victimhood, a sense of constantly having
1
Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA.
Corresponding author:
Pratap Bhanu Mehta, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA.
E-mail: Pbmehta@princeton.edu
32 Studies in Indian Politics 10(1)
been subjugated by foreign invasion. For Hindu nationalism, the real and enduring colonial hurt is not
British colonialism, but what they describe as Muslim invasions in the eight centuries prior to British
rule in India. The restoration of the temple at site of the Babri Masjid that Hindu nationalists had razed
to the ground, was akin to the independence of India. Perhaps it was even more significant since it was,
as the Prime Minister described it, a culmination of hundreds of years of struggle. August 5th rather than
August 15th was declared of equal significance in thinking of India’s independence. August 5th was
significant in the longer arc of India’s civilizational history, the moment where a glorious but subjugated
civilization finds its utterance. The Prime Minister emphasized that Indian history needs to be seem in
these civilizational terms and the Ram temple was an epicentre of that civilizational imagination.
Religious leaders of different Hindu denominations from all across India were present, displaying a
show of Hindu unity around Ram under the political auspices of the Prime Minister. Hinduism in
complex ways has been a deeply connecting cultural thread across the geography of India. But here it
was displaying the core ambition of Hindu nationalism: to collect these complex cultural threads and
weave them into a political unity and display it in full might.
The moment was also a political vindication of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its associated
family of organizations including the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS). It was the culmination of
the political and legal claims they had made since 1948 that this site belonged to Hindus, that the Babri
Masjid that stood there was a usurpation, and that the Ramjanmabhoomi trust had legal title to the land.
The Supreme Court judgement was in some ways as total a legal vindication of these claims as possible.
It set aside the secularist argument that restoring status quo ante for events that may have happened in
the sixteenth century was not an outlook befitting a modern secular state. It even set aside the Allahabad
High Court’s Judgement, which at least had the flavour of a compromise for the sake of peace: dividing
up the property, and building a mosque and temple side by side. The Supreme Court gave an order to find
an alternative land for building a mosque, much outside the city limits of Ayodhya. And finally, in a
lower Court decision, all those accused of conspiring to demolish the Babri Masjid, were acquitted. The
Mosque had been demolished by a vigilante mob. But apparently no crime had been committed. After
all, how could a movement that had been designated as freedom movement be punished?
This article is a rumination on the relationship between Hindu nationalism and democracy: on how it
emerges from within democracy to ultimately subvert it. The aim of the article is to explicate what Hindu
nationalism has done through the work of politics, its moral psychology and ruling style. It has four
sections: The first section lays down some conceptual issues in the relationship between Hindu
nationalism and democracy. The second section continues this discussion with a brief consideration of
the relationship between Hindu nationalism and caste and language. The third section looks at
nationalism’s transformation of Indian Constitutionalism, specifically its attempt to distinguish ‘Hindu
Rashtra’ (nation) and ‘Hindu Rajya’ (state). Finally, I end with a discussion of Hindu nationalism’s
alignment with authoritarianism in a political style that is not just corrosive of democracy, but of all
values. The aim is not to provide a full explanation of the rise of Hindu nationalism, as much as a
reflection on the way in which different levels of its ideology operate.
significant cultural and political current without manifesting itself in electoral politics. Its consolidation
is a conjuncture of several strands, which reinforce each other.
Hindu nationalism is a product of a challenge internal to democracy. To put it simplistically, the story
goes something like this. Post 1857, it became clear that India was going to adopt, albeit gradually, some
form of democratic governance. For the first time, the Muslim elite in India found itself without political
power. This set-in motion a complex politics about the Muslim political identity in India. It is in a
democracy the framework of a majority and a minority acquires political significance. We can debate the
nature of Hindu and Muslim political identity prior to the nineteenth century. But at a very basic level,
once the concept of minority and majority in was accepted as the basic conceptual framing, with Muslims
as a paradigm case of ‘minority’ a Hindu political identity is created almost by definition. The definition
of a ‘religious minority’ made sense only against the idea of a ‘majority’ who might have posed a
potential political threat to the minority; the two concepts co-created each other.
Every strand of politics that tried to think outside of the majority/minority framework was
relegated to the margins. Two strands that could have been possible alternatives to the majority–
minority framework. One was simply thinking in terms of equal individual rights and freedoms for
all citizens, protected by constitutional guarantees that did not require thinking in terms of a permanent
majority/minority framework in politics. But this strand, which could have taken a liberal form, was
seen as an ‘anti-minority’ strand, because it aimed at dissolving the significance of group identities
for political purposes. It did not, so to speak, take the problem of power sharing between groups qua
groups seriously.
The second strand to dissolve the majority–minority framework was to pluralize the notion of
‘minority’. India has too many cross-cutting cleavages. It is a collection of minorities (Ambedkar, 1945).
At a descriptive level, depending on the identity you choose to privilege, this might be true. But this
move had its own political limitations. The first is that the idea of cross cutting cleavages of caste and
region was never thought to be sufficient to displace the importance of ‘Muslim’ identity as a political
category (Ambedkar, 1948). By the 1940s this was becoming clearer. Ironically, then the attempt to see
India as a collection of minorities was then seen as a covert assault on Hindu identity; an attempt to deny
that despite plurality, cross cutting cleavages, regional and ideological variations, there could be such a
thing as Hindu identity.
From 1857 to 1947, one of the challenges of democracy was framed as the sharing of power between
Hindus and Muslims, through the representative process (Shaikh, 1989; Singh, 1987). But the problem
was that there was never an equilibrium solution to the problem of power sharing, through the process of
representation. If representation to minorities was given in excess to their numbers; or they were given
‘veto’ powers, the ‘majority’ felt aggrieved. If representation was not given in ways that gave minorities
effective power, perhaps even a ‘veto’ on certain issues, they would feel disempowered. In a tragic irony,
the negotiation over power sharing, increased rather than decreased the gulf between the political
leadership of the two communities in two ways. It reinforced the premise that the communities had some
distinct interests that could not be adequately protected through a language of individual rights and
common citizenship. And it probably failed to build trust, and put the communities in a competitive
dynamic in relation to each other. It also highlighted the fact that emphasizing strands of ‘common
culture’, the emergence of a civilization that had the imprint of all religions on it, was pretty weak gruel
with which to combat an actual political problem of power sharing. Appeals to shared culture cannot be
an answer to the problem of political power sharing.
After partition, the question of power sharing between Hindus and Muslims through the formal
process of representation was put off the agenda. But in an informal way, the argument continued
through the electoral process. It was important to Congress self-image that it be seen as representative
34 Studies in Indian Politics 10(1)
of Muslim interests at any rate. Until 2014, it was almost an article of faith that any ruling dispensation
in Delhi would require either the electoral support of Muslims, or of parties that claimed to respond to
their interests. In some senses, the mathematics of the electoral system would provide the conduit by
which Muslim interests were protected. Political coalitions would, given the fragmented nature of
Indian politics, seek out electoral support of Muslims. It led to creation of what might be called ‘electoral
secularism’, where parties had no particular concern about representing or empowering Muslims, but
needed them to forge electoral coalitions. This kind of minimal political responsiveness was quite
compatible with social, political and economic marginalization of Muslims. The Congress, secular
parties and the Indian State were Janus faced. On one hand, they were symbolically solicitous towards
Muslims, by selectively directing benefits that protected their identity interests: protecting minorities
from some forms of targeted violence, overturning judicial scrutiny of personal laws, or preventing
Salman Rushdie’s Satanic Verses from being circulated, for example. On the other hand, the same
parties could also selectively benefit from targeted communal violence at the local level, often to
reinforce the message that Muslims could not rely on the rule of law, but needed the discretionary
protection of the state.
This created a vicious circle: the less Muslims could acknowledge public economic and political life
as their own, the more they fell behind other communities on a range of empowerment indicators. But
the more they fell behind, and were alienated, the more it was used as a sign against them; they were
figured as a community singularly uncooperative when it came to integrating into India’s modernity. In
the case of Muslims, the resources of the state, when they were directed towards them, were meant to
reinforce their status as a distinct minority, not to fully empower them in the political process. Muslims
remained locked in a dilemma not quite of their own making. The more Muslim leadership (which in its
lack of political imagination was willing to oblige those who were constructing them as a supplicant
minority), emphasized their status as a minority, the more the conditions were created for a majoritarian
backlash. On the other hand, the wider political culture was doing its best to prevent Muslim integration
into wider society, in the same breath as it was demanding it. This account is a simplification, one that
obscures the complex realities of Muslim politics in India. But the net result was the majority-minority
framework got reinforced even more strongly in Indian politics (for splendid accounts of the complexity,
see Ahmed, 2019; Wahab, 2021). Arguably with a significant Muslim political elite having migrated to
Pakistan, elite level interaction of the two communities in common institutions was probably even less
in the 70s and 80s than pre-partition India. The partitions of the mind were also becoming deeper
sociological realities, allowing Hindu Nationalists to construct the ‘Muslim’ as an abstract figure, an
object of suspicion. The deep roots of Hindu nationalism were not in the overt triumph of the BJP. It was
in the covert commitment to deepening the majority/minority framework.
With this groundwork, it was just a matter of time when parties in the political system decided that
Muslims might be electorally dispensable. The decisive came when the BJP decided that an electoral
majority be cobbled without either relying on Muslim votes or the parties that supported them. Or more
strongly, rejecting the need for the support of minorities or parties that supported them could actually
help consolidate the majority vote. Muslims had been given a veto on Indian politics. The task was now
to make them ‘irrelevant’. This is how the refrain in the BJP went. There were no longer any compulsions
left for electoral secularism.
Hindu nationalism was, as Vinay Sitapati (2020) has pointed out, the idea that Hindus qua Hindus
should never again lose political power in the Subcontinent. This combined two deeply modern
impulses: a modern democratic obsession with a majority in numbers and the quest for a Hindu identity
that could paper over all other differences of caste and region. The obsession with majoritarian power
makes modern Hindu nationalism obsessed with demography in all its forms. Every single cause it
Mehta 35
champions has demography at the heart of it: conversion is an attempt to alter demography; marriage
outside the religion is an attempt to alter demography; differential birth rates in communities are not
symptoms of uneven development, but a vast conspiracy to alter demography. Any special rights given
to minorities, no matter how slight the burden they impose, are a violation of the laws of demography.
They suggest the giving of power to a community beyond what its numbers warrant. The year 2014
was a watershed in this respect, for it showed that minorities could be made electorally irrelevant.
While other political parties may not go so far as to target minorities, marginalizing them will become
the default mode, the common sense of Indian politics. All parties will, to varying degrees, emphasize
majority cultural privilege.
But the project ensuring the political domination of the Hindu majority was enabled by a set of
processes that have their own autonomous logic. Hindu majoritarianism has a legal logic. In the
nineteenth century ‘Hindu’ began to become a consolidated legal identity as a result of two processes:
the process of codification and the process of reform. The logic of imperial rule, was to govern
communities partly indirectly, through what they understood to be their own systems of personal law.
But these systems of law began to be codified in news ways in the nineteenth century, partly as a result
of the British need to understand an administer these laws. But the process of codification itself created
a more homogenous legal identity for Hindus—or even more broadly for Hindus, Jains, Buddhists and
Sikhs, who were grouped under a single legal identity largely to contrast it with Muslim and Christian
personal law. But the process of social reform, the slow correction of caste and gender injustices in these
traditional systems of law by the state, meant that the state and the legal identities of the communities got
increasingly entangled (Larson, 2002; Menski, 2008). When the state enacted reforms of Hindu law, it
was performing a dual function. On one hand it was acting as a modern state trying to nudge Hindu law
into reform. It was able to do that because of the organizational character of Hinduism. With no central
authority, no central text, the only ways in which Hindus could settle their need for reform was through
democratic institutions, which happened to be institutions of the state. The Indian State was acting not
just as a secular state reforming Hindu law, it was acting as a State of the Hindus who were, collectively
through its institutions reforming their own laws. This applied even to matters of temple administration,
for example, where the state could take over, reform administer and supervise the running of temples.
The spectre of a secular state, managing thousands of temples, through properly organized government
departments, is an anomaly from the point of view of secularism (Smith, 1953). The distinction that the
state manages the secular aspects of the temple and not its religious aspects can be hard to maintain.
Hindu nationalism is partially correct that liberals sometimes worry too little about the statism implicit
in the state running temples.
But the Hindutva narrative, that this phenomenon is another instance of the state victimizing Hindus,
is exaggerated myth making. No Hindu’s religious worship has been impeded. The histories of the
management of specific temples and state endowment acts vary. But broadly speaking, there was a
genuine conundrum over who has sovereign rights over the administration of historically significant
temples. Temples were ritual scaffoldings for maintaining kingship; the king in turn, while leaving
theological matters to priests, was responsible for management oversight. As kingship dissolved, the
question was who would step in for that management role? The answer was other Hindus, but now
through the democratic mechanisms of the state. This is not an instance of the state exercising sovereignty
over Hindus; it is Hindus collectively governing their temples through new mechanisms. So the campaign
to rescue temples is not about rescuing Hindus from the State. Hindu temples are run by Hindus. There
is also an irony here which underscores the entanglement of state and Hindu identity. It is actually the
state’s systematization of temple management the created a consolidated legal identity for Hindu temples
in the first place.
36 Studies in Indian Politics 10(1)
But arguably, it is this consolidation of Hindu legal identity in and through the state, that achieves one
of the central aims of Hindu nationalism; it is work already done by the process of modernization in
India. But this consolidation also raised another question. If democratic institutions of the state,
parliaments, and state legislatures were going to be the forums through which Hindus would govern their
legal identity, and undertake the process of reform, what is the relationship of these institutions to
minorities and their legal identities? Did parliament have exactly the same authority to reform personal
laws of other communities? Formally, in a constitutional sense it does. But politically the answer was
always fudged. Would a parliament exercising authority over Muslim Personal Law or Wakf Boards be
an instance of a majority exercising power over a minority? Or would it be an instance of a secular
parliament exercising authority in these matters over all communities, as it should? (Chatterjee, 2008).
Hindu nationalism accused the secular state of acting in bad faith: acting as if it had only jurisdiction
over Hindus. So, the process of Hindu legal consolidation through the democratic state led to the
emergence of a Hindu legal identity. But is also allowed that identity to play victim by claiming that the
state had asymmetrically exercised authority over the majority.
This bland rendering of the political project of Hindu nationalism does not of course do justice to
the underlying furies that fuel it. At the core of its sensibility is the idea of victimhood, and the
community of memory required to nourish that sense of victimhood. Hindus are perpetual victims, a
status that can be overcome only by consolidating Hindu political power. They were first the victims
of Islamic invasions, which Hindu nationalism sees as one monolith subjugating Hindus. Then they
were victims of British colonialism that at one stroke invalidated all the knowledge claims of a rich
and complex civilization. They were then victims of the Nehruvian State. Hindu nationalism sees its
marginalization at the hands of the Nehruvian State as an even deeper affront, because it was
marginalization at the hands of a state where power was in Hindu hands. The vehemence against the
Nehruvian State is even deeper than against the British State, not just for the obvious reason that the
Congress Party is still an active political force, and the attack on Nehru is also an attack on its
provenance. The Nehruvian State is seen as an act of multiple betrayal of Hindus. It was not a state
that in the dominant discourses of the time, which could even acknowledge the reality of past Hindu
subjugation; it actively repressed these popular memories and narratives. It presented Medieval India
as a tale of the emergence of a syncretic civilization rather than seeing it for what it was: an era of
conflict and Hindu subjugation, which a few episodes of liberality and syncretic patronage could not
negate (Dasgupta, 2019; Naipaul, 1988). The mistake of the Nehruvian imagination was that it played
on the territory that Hindu nationalism wanted to play: the territory of history. For a secular nation it
was important to tell the history of the past as a secular history. The problem with this move was that
it was always going to be empirically contestable.It also legitmized the idea that beliefs about the past
or debates in historiography have to serve the function of legitimating present political identities
(Bhattacharya, 2008). It provided less space to acknowledge a history of conflict, and believe at the
same time that a new social contract has been written, in which past conflicts are irrelevant. The larger
debate about the lens through which India’s past is understood will remain an animating impulse on
Hindu nationalism.
But it would be a mistake to see the BJP as a return to the past. In some ways its reconfiguration of
Hinduism is as profound as its attack on Indian Constitutionalism. While it adopts the cultural grammar
of Hinduism, its main interests are neither religiosity, culture theology or the deep variety and
capaciousness of Hinduism. Its main interest is the construction of a unified ethnic identification with
Hindutva. The core of this identity is the sense of victimhood, and acquiring political power over other
communities. The victimhood has a number of tropes, in addition to a sense of being historically
colonized. It is reinforced by partition, the vivisection of India’s sacred geography. It was then reinforced
Mehta 37
by the perception that the Nehruvian State, in its fidelity to constitutional values and its concern to
prevent further political violence after partition, was simply not pushing the logic of partition to its
ultimate conclusion. The truth is it is hard to argue that Hindus or Hinduism were victimized by the state
in post-independence India. But victimhood narratives of nationalism just need pivotal and symbolic
events on which to hang onto the psychological comforts of victimhood. And the state did oblige them
from time to time. For example, the Shah Bano case, the expulsion of Kashmiri Pandits, the global
discourse on terrorism, and the alleged marginalization of Indian knowledge systems were all strung in
a narrative of victimhood.
This kind of victimhood is that requires a perpetual diet to nourish it. Which is why Hindu
nationalism will not rest content with settling a limited set of issues. For instance even after the
triumph at Ayodhya, the matter of reclaiming sites on which Mosques were built is not a closed matter,
as the demands for Kashi and Mathura indicate. The purpose of reclaiming these shrines is not
religiosity. The purpose of claiming it back is to claim that Hindus have power qua Hindus and they
can now show Muslims their place. It is to use a sacred place of worship as a weaponized tool against
another community (Mohan, 2008).
syndrome, where the contempt for Congress far trumps their fear of anything else. In this sense, a
consistent and thorough going anti-Congressism is the bete noire of Hindu nationalism.
The second element is the complex sociology of identity politics, especially caste politics, in India.
Until the early 2000s, the BJP was identified, both in sociological and ideological terms, as an upper
caste party, channelling upper caste resentment. But a number of developments transformed the character
of the party.
Caste politics in the eighties and nineties were characterized by two features. The first was that the
arithmetic of caste itself was indeed important—a lot of political strategizing was about the creation of
political majorities through caste coalitions. Think of the Kshatriya, Harijan, Adivasi, Muslim (KHAM)
alliances in Gujarat for example. The second was the assertion of new forms of agency amongst caste
groups through agglomeration into self-conscious political forces: think of the Samajwadi Party (SP) and
Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) for example, channelling, Other Backward Class (OBC) and Dalit identities.
These parties were major elements in alliances that governed India. Caste is still a significant factor in
Indian politics, but its character began to change in ways that the BJP was quick to grasp.
But there is a curious kind of ambivalence that attends caste politics in India. On one hand, taking
caste into account is absolutely necessary for understanding social, economic and political power
structures in India. It could be an agent of the deepening of democracy. But on the other hand, it raises
the spectre of politics being largely majoritarian identity politics in different form—where the majority
is a coalition of caste identities. For secular parties, extolling caste-based mobilization became a kind of
mantra. The idea was that these cross-cutting cleavages of caste would prevent the consolidation of a
more unified Hindu political identity; Mandal would prevent Mandir. But this valorisation of caste
politics, paradoxically, created the conditions for the rise of the BJP. As Rajni Kothari, had presciently
argued, caste politics had the potential of consolidating Hindu nationalism. The mechanism of this
consolidation would not be, as many thought, just the consolidation of an upper caste constituency
behind the BJP (though that might happen). The mechanism of the consolidation would be subtler. Caste
politics would pretty much expose the ideological bankruptcy of all political formations; it would
legitimize foregrounding identity politics and it would allow the BJP to make the argument that it stood
for a larger national interest, not merely for the particularisms of caste or sectional interests (Kothari,
1992). If the electoral contest was constructed in the final analysis as a coalition of ‘sectional interests’
versus ‘national interest’, rather than competing versions of it, guess which will win in the long term? It
is another matter that Rajni Kothari himself also fell victim to the comforting fiction that merely a
collection of caste interests could stop the BJP.
But the BJP did not so much as do away with caste politics, but subtly and fairly effectively repositioned
it within a Hindutva framing, keeping on board its social justice impulses, while enlisting it in a larger
identity. In part it was able to do this because of the availability of a leader who could do this more
credibly. Narendra Modi’s personal biography, as a leader who did not come from privileged circumstances
in economic or social terms, allowed the possibility of sections of marginalized groups identifying with
him in a way that would have been impossible a decade ago. The vote concentration of the BJP amongst
the upper castes is still the higher than amongst any other group, but Narendra Modi allowed the BJP to
expand its social base quite dramatically.
The BJP also recognized that caste mobilization in part required a focal point, and the focal point
was reservations. In the 1980s, upper caste support to the BJP was prompted by the hope that it would
oppose reservations. But the BJP neutralized the issue politically by embracing the social justice logic
of reservations, thus taking it off the political agenda, and paving the way for OBCSs, SCs and STs not
opposing it. It also realized that there were exogenous developments taking place within the politics
of caste. From the eighties onwards, the logic of caste political mobilization had been, what might be
Mehta 39
called agglomerative. Parties like the BSP, SP, and Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) were consolidating
different jatis (castes) into an agglomerative political consciousness defined by larger categories like
Scheduled Caste (SC) and Scheduled Tribe (ST). But this strategy had run its course. With rolling back
of reservations now off the agenda, there was no focal point for this mobilization. But the internal
differentiation of these groups also caught up with the politics of caste. Partly as a result of economic
growth and some occupational change, different subcastes were differently positioned to gain benefits
from reservation or from economic growth more generally. This greater internal differentiation, made
the agglomerative logic of caste movements more difficult to sustain. Now the logic was pointing
towards deagglomeration—distributing benefits within these caste formations, through sub-quotas for
instance. This allowed the BJP to wean away particular subgroups within these otherwise potent caste
formations. Larger economic and cultural changes are slowly disembedding voters from fixed social
formations and making them available for new forms of mobilization (Narayan, 2021).
The faith that caste politics would be the antidote to Hindutva ironically made the Centre and even the
Left in India more sociologically deterministic. The BJP, on the other hand, has a generative conception
of identity. Identities can be reconfigured through the work of propaganda, outreach, providing services
and political mobilization. It also understands that political violence can alter political identifications by
creating the conditions where one identity can be suddenly made more salient. It also has the advantage
of organizations like the RSS, whose agenda is certainly electoral. But it is also more than electoral. It is
to bring about a long-term cultural shift in people’s default identifications, to generate new forms of
identification which might not have existed. On this front, the BJP’s ground strategy has been long term,
subtle, and more effective. Two recent books on the BJP document this in full measure. Tariq Thachil
(2014), for example, argued that the social service wings of the BJP were responsible for creating almost
a silent revolution in generating new forms of identification with the BJP by providing services. and
Arkotang Longkumer’s brilliant book, The Greater India Experiment: Hindutva and the North East
(2020), also makes a similar argument about the BJP’s unlikely success in the Northeast. There in
addition to providing services, making themselves part of the cultural fabric, the RSS tapped into local
memories of victimization and violence to create new identities.
The lazy assumption that caste would check Hindutva was a product of a sociological imagination
that did not understand either caste or Hindutva. As Ambedkar had presciently argued, in part it is caste
division that necessitates the search for an external enemy for unifying Hinduism (though, in fairness,
there is almost no collective identity that is not sustained by positing an external enemy). There is no a
priori reason to suppose that Dalit or OBCs would not, if conditions were right, participate in the
Hindutva project, including its violence. It also underestimates the degree to which the RSS has worked
to shed at least some of its upper caste baggage. The party and organizational hierarchy may still reflect
vestiges of upper caste dominance. But these vestiges are, in all likelihood less onerous than those of the
Congress party which, for all its symbolic commitment to social justice, pretty much remained a party in
which the traditional hierarchies of caste were reproduced in subtler forms. The Congress treatment of
Ambedkar’s intellectual legacy is a case in point. The sociologist M. N. Srinivas had in almost
Brahminical vein argued that there were two competing models through which traditional caste social
mores would be overcome: Westernization or Sanskritization (Srinivas, 1962). It was always assumed
that the BJP or RSS would prefer Sanskritization: the imbuing of high caste sensibilities and mores in the
general population. While this still remains an ambition for Hindu nationalism, it has in practice settled
for something more capacious: Ethnicization. This simply involves identifying as a Hindu in demographic
terms, and becoming part of the project of political Hindutva. It is compatible with a wider cultural
grammar—which is why it has been so easy for the RSS to incorporate everything from local forms of
worship of Dalit communities, to every member of the nationalist pantheon from Ambedkar
to Vivekananda.
40 Studies in Indian Politics 10(1)
The one final element that has to be taken into considerations is the role of Hindi in the ideological
imagination of the Hindu nationalism. In North India it is impossible to imagine the success of the BJP
without taking into account the politics of Hindi. There is probably not much political appetite or cultural
support for the imposition of Hindi, even in North India. But there is a profound sense that Hindi has
been marginalized at least in terms of status. In the case of other vernacular languages, the demand for
linguistic states allowed for a politics where language issues were front and centre. In the non-Hindi
speaking regions, the political elite had to, in some senses identify with the vernacular. But in Hindi
speaking areas, the sense of resentment that English was a marker of political privilege, that Hindi was
no longer a conduit of knowledge production, or that one signalled status by a distance from Hindi is
quite acute. This is why, even without the grand ambition of imposing Hindi on the rest of the nation, the
question of the status of Hindi is not without political resonance. The marginalization of Hindi, always
meant that there was room for a party to occupy that vernacular space. This is something the BJP did with
aplomb in Uttar Pradesh (UP) In fact, one simpler explanation of Congress’ decline in UP is that it does
not have even a handful speakers who can command an audience in Hindi. The marginalization of Hindi
could then be mobilized as a sign of the marginalization of a whole vernacular culture.
This moving list can include minorities, especially Muslims. But it can also include liberals, leftists,
those who might use caste as counterpoint to Hinduism, or those who simply want to define their
identity on their own terms.
But where the distinction between Hindu Rashtra and the Hindu Rajya is blurred is that the
enforcement of the script of nationalism requires the deployment of state power. The project of Hindu
Rashtra is articulated, enforced, and propagated through the aegis of the State. The project of Hindu
Rashtra cannot be realized without the state curbing freedoms or in some cases institutionalizing
discrimination.
Recent developments clearly show how facile this distinction between Hindu Rashtra and Hindu
Rajya is. The laying of the foundation stone at Ayodhya was both the apotheosis of Hindu Rashtra, but
also its alignment with state power through majoritarian assertion. The Citizenship Amendment Act and
accompanying discussion on the National Register for Citizens made explicit the idea of India as a
homeland for Hindus. The purpose of the Citizenship Amendment Act was to grant persecuted minority
refugees from neighbouring states a fast track to citizenship status. This aim was reasonable enough. But
the Act enshrined a principle of religious discrimination in India law by excluding the possibility that
persecuted Muslims could also seek citizenship through this particular law. The surrounding political
discourse raised the spectre of creating a National Register of Citizens where all citizens would be asked
to prove their citizenship. But everyone understood that this process would involve a differential burden
of proof for Muslims and non-Muslims.
Several states are enacting what are now known as ‘love jihad’ laws. Many states already had laws
regulating religious conversion. But the new laws break new ground. Amongst other things, they require
a two month notice to the state before any religious conversion can take place. They shift the burden of
proof on the citizen to demonstrate that their conversion is not a result of force or fraudulent means. They
allow the annulment of marriages where the state comes to the conclusion that the objective of the
marriage was to convert the woman. In effect, the purpose of these laws is to severely discourage
interfaith marriages. These laws are an incredible infringement on individual freedom and give the state
the power to regulate the most consequential and intimate choices human beings make about their
own lives.
But these laws illustrate that the distinction between Hindu Rashtra and Hindu Rajya is bogus. These
laws alter the character of the Indian State, not just the character of the Indian Nation. The function of
the state now is to give expression to the core anxieties of the Hindu Rashtra. It gives expression to the
vilest ideological trope in Hindu nationalism, of young Muslim men, being a threat to the nation, since
they might seduce helpless Hindu women. This idea has moved from being a cultural trope to being the
basis of state policy. One can multiply examples. Many states had cow protection laws. Cow protection,
like personal laws, has always been one of the many ambiguous compromises the Indian Constitution the
secular state made with religious identities. There are attempts to justify cow protection on secular
grounds, but there is no doubt in anyone’s mind that the ban on cow slaughter is underpinned by the
ideology of Hindu Rashtra.
The distinction between Hindu Rashtra and Hindu Rajya had a degree of plausibility for two reasons.
First, so far Hindu nationalism has sought legitimation through electoral means; indeed on some accounts
it is committed to electoral democracy since that is a conduit of majoritarian power. Second, it has also
positioned itself as not so much establishing a Hindu Rajya, but completing the unfinished constitutional
business of partition. So, for example, it can in principle, present the scrapping of Article 370 in Kashmir,
or the project for a common civil code as stemming, not from any conception of a Hindu Rajya, but from
the values inherent in the Indian Constitution. This is Indian constitutionalism finding the courage of its
own convictions. There could be a plausible case made on these lines. But this is not quite what Hindu
42 Studies in Indian Politics 10(1)
nationalism is up to when using state power. These are mere pretexts to show majoritarian assertion.
For instance, the normative case for the abolition of triple talaq, on liberal grounds is quite strong. The
BJP brought legislation to this effect. But by criminalizing, and not merely invalidating triple talaq,
the BJP not just wanted to reform; it also wanted to use the case to stigmatize Muslims. A possible case
could be made for scrapping Article 370. But doing it, while at the same time partitioning Jammu and
Kashmir without the consent of the Assembly and, for the first time in Independent India’s history,
downgrading the state, and depriving its citizens of civil rights, was again meant to be a show of
majoritarian power. Incidentally, the subtle majoritarian assertion on federalism is manifest in the fact
there every proposal to divide the one state that needs to be broken down into smaller states, UP
(which has a population the size of Brazil), is shot down for fear of creating a state in western UP,
where Muslims might, because of the demography, be able to exercise more representative power than
they do in a large state.
I want to use one more illustration to show that concept of ‘Rajya’ cannot be delinked from
‘Rashtra’. India’s free speech jurisprudence has always been fraught with inconsistencies. It has to be
admitted that the politics of free speech was in part shaped by interpretations of Section 295 of the
Indian Penal Code, which gives the state the power to ban speech that intentionally offends religion.
This has functioned as a version of blasphemy law in India. It was first enacted by the Punjab
Legislative Assembly, in response to the Rangila Rasool case, a book that was an offensive depiction
of the Life of Muhammad. The detailed history of the applications of section 295 need not detain us
here. But the political dynamic of the section is interesting. It encourages political mobilization on
behalf of censorship, since you know there is already an acceptance of the principle, and you can
expect the government to respond. In a society comprised of different group identities, this identity
has a competitive dynamic. If you have three religious communities ‘X’, ‘Y’ and ‘Z’, and if a piece of
art or novel offensive to ‘X’ is censored, ‘Y’ and ‘Z’ will also often measure their recognition of their
community identity by asserting similar claims. If offensive novels or cartoons about the Prophet
Mohammed can be proscribed, why not about Basavanna, Shivaji or Nanak? If Satanic Verses can be
deemed offensive why not the Kannada novel Dharamkaarana? Communities begin to measure their
power—and comparative self-esteem—by what they can silence or have banned. It is striking in the
politics of censorship, how little people are interested in theology or ideas. But the idea is to provoke
a demand for censorship or retaliation by a community to put them in bad light or stigmatize them. In
the politics of free speech, Hindu nationalism argues, it is the assertion of community power, not just
legal standards that have governed the regulation of speech. This is an area, where the state was also
accused of giving minorities a veto—the claim was that Indian free speech jurisprudence has not had
the courage to be liberal in order to accommodate Muslim concerns over Mohammed. Again, there
might be a plausible liberal argument to be made here. But Hindu nationalism uses this as a pretext not
to expand the boundaries of free speech but to expand the circumference of offense (Mehta, 2015).
The Indian state’s track record of impartial dispensation of justice after communal riots has always
been patchy. The judicial and investigative aftermath of the horrible pogroms of 1984 and 2002 are the
most striking examples of this dismal failure. Riot and terror investigations have often been
communalized or been conducted through a partisan frame. All of this is facilitated by the fact that the
investigative agencies, the police, and the prosecution are often not independent. If the evidence of the
aftermath of the Delhi riots of 2020 or the probes after recent lynchings are any indication, we will see
an even more systematic institutionalization of majoritarianism in the administrative practises of the
state.
In short, the inescapable conclusion is that the Hindu Rashtra will pull no stops in ensuring that it
is clear that it is a Hindu Rajya or at least the Rajya of Hindus.
Mehta 43
sympathy, civility—become terms of contempt, supplanted by new virtues like pitilessness, indifference,
antipathy, and incivility.
At various points, even the most morally progressive individuals can act like cretins: incapable or
unwilling to be moved in the face of manifest moral demands. Radical inequality, where our fellow
citizens almost seem like some other species, whose existence places no moral demands on us, can also
produce a quotidian kind of cretinism. Collective identities can sometimes abstract our thoughts away
from the humanity and individuality of others, and make us particularly prone to cretinism. We are
immune to the moral values at stake beyond the fulfilment of our own collective narcissism. Our morality
is defined by the need to seek new enemies. Nationalism can sometimes lead to a profound moral
regression in just this sense. What is distinctive about Hindu nationalism under Modi is that cretinism
itself becomes a high moral standard. It is hard to imagine a time in recent history where political leaders
openly support a culture of violence without compunction or any trace of self-consciousness, public
discourse routinely carpet-bombs fine distinctions with a view to making any nuanced moral responses
impossible, and sympathy is routinely so partitioned along partisan lines that the possibility of any
human response to tragedy and atrocity seems like a distant gleam.
For Hindu nationalism, this moral cretinism is actually part of its aesthetic allure. It induces a certain
kind of disinhibition, the key feature of fascist politics. Truth is tied too much to the coercion of reason.
If something is true, I have to believe it; I am obliged to believe it. But what if there is a certain kind of
freedom you experience in breaking the shackles of truth? Hannah Arendt once perceptively noted that
truth is ‘conservative’. It presupposes a presumptive reality to which we have to correspond. Lies,
illusions, misrepresentations, alternate reality—we experience an exhilarating display of freedom in
these. We like to inhabit our imaginations—make things up; the purpose of language is not just to
represent but to ‘create’. We find the imagination more liberating than reason. The attractiveness of
leaders who are contemptuous of the truth and of moral constraints is just this. People see in their
disregard of truth a perfect freedom: the leader is so free he can even disregard the truth.
Hindu nationalism has at the moment licensed a cult of personality. For in an era impatient with
institutions, salvation had to be found in charismatic individuals who could stamp their destiny on the
nation. To even suggest that it is foolish to deny Modi’s political appeal is to risk being complicit in what
he does with his political power. But one cannot understand the power of Hindu Nationalist politics if
one does not bring the sheer distinctiveness of Modi into the picture. He displayed, like all authoritarian
characters, the sheer will to power, a ruthlessness that is itself part of the attraction. He came across as
effective for the sheer energy and single-mindedness he put into his political pursuits. Confronted with
opponents who had, it seems, almost lost the will to pursue power, his will stood out. The second element
was his ability to produce affective identification. He managed to portray himself as India’s success
story, the everyman who could fight adversity and rise to the top on his own effort.
He had a visceral dislike of the Gandhi dynasty but, in the critique of dynastic politics, he positioned
himself against a corrupt and entitled order. The more moral and intellectual contempt that was heaped
on him, the easier that identification became. Third, he positioned himself as a moral paragon—in whom
self-interest was not even possible. In India, it is very common for kinship relations to override any
conception of public and private. But paradoxically, it makes the appeal of someone who stands apart
from kinship—and who thereby claims to have no self-interest, only a concern for the general good—all
the more resonant. This is not simply the virtue of the allegedly celibate pracharak, it is the virtue of a
leader who did not inherit a family mantle and will not leave one. Fourth, this was a speaker for whom
identification was created by his locutionary campaign. The truth is made through the act of speaking; it
is not an independent test of veracity. The very thing that commentators find a weakness, the refusal to
answer questions or seriously face a press conference, was the very thing that shored up his power. To
Mehta 45
acknowledge someone else’s questions is to cede possibility to the idea that someone else might have the
truth. The fusion of truth and conviction is the hallmark of Hindu Nationalists politics: the perfect
antidote to liberals who cannot take their own side in an argument. And finally, there was at least in 2014
the ability to cleverly craft messages, the ability to tell different audiences that he was speaking to them.
He made himself the Representative of the Nation, with all his contradictions enfolded within him. His
followers made him the ultimate apotheosis of the Indian nation.
Is the cult of the leader incompatible with the institutionalization of the Party State? It is possible that
the two will run into headlong contradiction. But for the ideologically single minded, the two often go
together. The leader needs the party for control; the party needs the leader to personify its political goals.
An unchallenged leader is a source of fear and discipline the party needs; the party is in some sense the
organization through which the leader exercises power. It is not an accident that in party states like Nazi
Germany on the Right, or Communist China on the Left, the party and the cult of leadership have
coexisted.
Hindu nationalism has, under Modi, latched on to the language of populism. These two languages
have an elective affinity. Both posit an already constituted people in whose name the leader or the party
speaks. Both operate on the assumption that there is a singular account of the public good, and the leader
or the party is the custodian of that good. Any disagreement, is to be therefore understood as a betrayal.
Dissent is closer to act of treason. Both have a suspicion of the fragmentation of power: they say it as a
ruse to prevent the consolidation of a singular purpose or identity. They are therefore contemptuous of
all checks and balances, all formal constraints on power. Almost all the important checks and balances
of Indian democracy have been eroded. Independent institutions like the Supreme Court have not held
the state accountable in basic matters of civil liberties and habeas corpus; anti-terror laws and sedition
laws continue to be used against dissenters; academic freedom is increasingly in peril, and almost all the
formal constrains of constitutional and administrative procedure can be put aside at will. Hindu
nationalism’s biggest casualty has been the Indian Constitution. The interpretation of the constitution,
and its custodianship by important institutions, is now so capricious that no one can tell you with a
straight face what the Indian Constitution actually is.
Conclusion
This article has argued that Hindu nationalism has been a constant shadow on Indian democracy, in part
a product of the long debate over nationalism and representation. It has become the dominant political
sensibility of India politics, which is now irrevocably majoritarian. But that majoritarianism is now
allied to a deep-seated authoritarianism, reflected in its institutional imagination, in its moral psychology
and political style. Can it be defeated? At one level, this is an easy question. Electorally defeating Hindu
nationalism depends on contingent political conjunctures. One can overtheorize this question. But the
mathematical truths of Indian politics still afford opportunities to defeating the BJP. Simply put, states
where the opposition can provide a single or united alternative to the BJP are states where the BJP will
struggle. Its vote share to seat conversion ratio has been facilitated by the fragmentation of the opposition.
So in part, the answer to this question depends on opposition electoral strategizing and capabilities. The
BJP could weaken because of its own lack of performance. Its economic performance before the
pandemic was middling at best, on the most generous interpretation. The modest tides of discontent, and
the power of social movements has so far failed to seriously dent the BJP’s electoral power. How long
will this opening last? How Modi might respond to a dent in his popularity? What political moves will
he come up with? This is anyone’s guess. This article will not gaze into the future and predict what is
46 Studies in Indian Politics 10(1)
politically in store. But here are two dangers to Indian democracy worth noting. The first is that Hindu
nationalism’s transformation of Indian civil society is deep and far reaching. The open justification of
communal prejudice, the empowering of right-wing vigilante groups, and susceptibility to a moral
cretinism are not going to be easy to put back in the bottle. It is hard to estimate this, but it might also be
the case that Hindu nationalism has now made enough inroads into the state, planting enough committed
elites in key positions that even the hue of the state might not be as easy to change with just an
electoral defeat.
The second risk is: What is Hindu nationalism’s commitment to electoral democracy? If electoral
democracy ceases to legitimize Hindu nationalism, how will it respond? The structure of the party, and
the fact that a kind of violent vigilantism is institutionalized in the party especially in states like UP
should alert one to the prospect that a transition of power may not be entirely peaceful. Or even if there
is, there may be constant attempts to subvert constitutional democracy by extra-constitutional or even
violent means. Will such defeat inflame the victim complex that Hindu nationalism trades on, to the
point that all bets are off in terms of the kind of communal polarization possible? Hindu nationalism has
tested Indian democracy to a dangerous point while in power; it might test it even more in days to come.
But defeating nationalism will require engaging with the long arc and deep fissures of Indian history
since the nineteenth century.
Funding
The author received no financial support for the research, authorship and/or publication of this article.
References
Ahmed, H. (2019). Siyasi Muslims: A story of political Islams in India. Viking Penguin.
Ambedkar, B. R. (1945). States and minorities: What are their rights and how to secure them in the Constitution?
Baba Saheb Dr Ambedkar Memorial Society.
Ambedkar, B. R. (1948). Pakistan or the partition of India (3rd ed.). Thacker Publications.
Bhattacharya, N. (2008). Predicaments of secular histories. Public Culture 20(1), 57–73.
Bullock, A. (1952). Hitler: A study in tyranny. Penguin.
Chatterjee, P. (2008). A possible India: Essays in political criticism. Oxford University Press.
Dasgupta, S. (2019). Awakening Bharat Mata: The political beliefs of the Indian Right. Penguin.
Kothari, R. (1992). Pluralism and secularism: Lessons of Ayodhya. Economic and Political Weekly, 27(51–52),
2695–2698.
Larson, G. J. (2002). Personal law in secular India: A call to judgement. Indian University Press.
Longkumer, A. (2020). The Greater India experiment: Hindutva and the Northeast. Stanford University Press.
Madhav, R. (2020). Because India comes first: Reflections on nationalism, identity and culture. Westland.
Mehta, P. M. (2015, January 29). The crooked lives of free speech. Open. https://openthemagazine.com/voices/
the-crooked-lives-of-free-speech/
Menski, W. (2008). Hindu law: Between tradition and modernity. Oxford University Press.
Mohan, N. (2008). Hindutva [Hindi]. Prabhat Prakashan.
Naipaul, V. S. (1988). India: A million mutinies now. Penguin.
Narayan, B. (2021). The Republic of Hindutva: How the Sangh is reshaping Indian democracy. Penguin.
Shaikh, F. (1989). Community and consensus in Islam: Muslim representation in colonial India, 1860–1947.
Cambridge University Press.
Mehta 47
Singh, A. I. (1987). The Origins of the partition of India, 1936–1947. Oxford University Press.
Singh, S. (2019, October 4). Indian liberals don’t get the difference between Hindu Rajya & Mohan Bhagwat’s
Hindu Rashtra. The Print. https://theprint.in/opinion/indian-liberals-difference-hindu-state-rss-mohan-bhagwat-
hindu-rashtra/300909/
Sitapati, V. (2020). Jugalbandi: The BJP before Modi. Penguin.
Smith, D. E. (1953). India as a secular state. Princeton University Press
Srinivas, M. N. (1962). Caste in modern India and other essays. Asia Publishing House.
Thachil, T. (2014). Elite parties, poor voters: How social services wins votes in India. Cambridge University Press.
The Indian Express. (2020, August 5). Ram Mandir Bhumi Pujan: Full text of PM Narendra Modi’s speech in
Ayodhya. https://indianexpress.com/article/india/ram-mandir-bhumi-pujan-full-text-of-pm-narendra-modis-
speech-in-ayodhya/
Vaishnav, M., & Hintson, J. (2019). The dawn of India’s fourth party system (Working Paper). Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace.
Wahab, G. (2021). Born a Muslim: Some truths about Islam in India. Aleph.
Zavos, J. (2000). The emergence of Hindu nationalism in India. Oxford University Press.