Hindu Hitler, II. Madhav Sadashiv Golwalkar. aka. Guruji. |
Madhav was enticed into 'Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh,' 'RSS,' modeled after Hitler's dreaded racist armed volunteer outfit of German white Aryan, "SS," as a 'Swayamsevak," volunteer. Dr. Keshav Baliram Hedgevar, a Telugu expatriate/Marathi Deshastha Brahmin, former Congress party active worker, jailed for anti British activities founded RSS. On August 13, 1939, Madhav was named as a "Sarsanghchalak," dictator of RSS. Hedgevar, apparently loved Madhav so much that he pushed aside his most loyal disciple, Madhukar and left secret, sealed envelope to appoint Madhav his heir. Not till Hedgevar kicked the bucket Madhav had any inkling of such selection. RSS was said to have founded in 1925 but not untill 1937 its core articles of association were finalized. Saffron flag is the only National flag. "ekachaalakaanuvartittva," Dictatorship of one. More later...
Madhav was born at Nagpur, in Varhad, once a princely state held by one of the Peshva warlords, Bhosle, to a lower middle class Brahmin family on February 19, 1906. At a young age of nine, Brahmins used to teach their kids at home before entering them into British public school system, Madhav passed grammar school, called vernacular primary school in India, with a distinction of being the first in the class in a greater Narmada region entitling him to a small scholarship. Next seven years in high school were, academically, mediocre matriculating at the age of sixteen in 1922. Two years in a local community college earned him an associate degree locally called, "Inter." He won the first place in the college in English subject and transferred to one of the most prestigious colleges/university, 'Benaras Hindu University,' for next two years to get a degree of B.Sc in 1926 at the age of twenty. Two years of graduate level study in Zoology got him a M.Sc. degree, quite an achievement for his time. Worked at a project in an acquatic sciences for one year in Madras as a research fellow in 1929 to come back to the Benaras Hindu University to teach for the next three years upto 1933. In this period Madhav got hooked, associated with the RSS. Returned to Nagpur to continue his education in law getting a law degree, LL.B. in 1935. In Nagpur, Madhav managed a small branch of RSS at 'Tulashibag,' where a monument to the original dictator is made in terms of a holy Hindu temple of god, making a life sized bronze replica, image of Hedgevar as an object of worship, as an RSS branch manager, 'kaaryavaaha.' Madhav, apparently, did not get along with the jaded RSS brass and quit RSS to join Ramakrishna Mission at Sargachhi, Bengal. Madhav became an inductee and worked/served under the president of Ramakrishna Mission, one Akhandanand becoming an official inductee in that organization which is known for service to the entire humanity. Sad as it sounds, after the death of his guru Akhandanand on February 7, 1937, Madhav abandoned his vows, ditched the Ramakrishna Mission, for good, sort of awol behavior. I believe, this crazy action left the Mission poor, perhaps rich in terms of a hot headed vagrant boy not being able to hurt Mission's multifacets of selfless social, religious regeneration work. In 1938, Madhav was elevated in RSS, which he abandoned before, or kicked out, one of the other, to become chief brainwash officer. With this kind of on the job training at Nagpur to the satisfaction of Hedgevar, earning his trust, Madhav was dispatched back to Bengal to open an RSS branch, starting as the brainwash officer graduating to the chief of all RSS operations till 1940. At the death of Hedgevar on Friday the 29th of June 1940, Madhav was summoned to the funeral. Hedgevar left a secret communication in a sealed envelope making Madhav his heir against all the popular beliefs that Madhukar was supposed to be the senior disciple. Madhukar, like the brainwashed trooper he was, ate crow and offered his services to the new Don, a dictator, Madhav Sadashiv Golwalkar, a fence sitter, a cheat, an awol sanyasi of Ramakrishna Mission. Hindu Hitler Series, II. |