MUMBAI, January 12, 2015
Amid Dharavi’s Pongal pots, RSS reaps Hindutva harvest
In 2000s, the Sangh fiercely opposed entry of Christian evangelists into the slum
Each year, the arrival of trucks loaded with black
sugarcane all the way from Tamil Nadu marks the start of the
preparations for Pongal, the Tamil harvest festival in Dharavi.
While
the festival brings together Mumbai’s Tamils, a sizeable section in in
Dharavi, it is also increasingly used as a platform for the Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh in its drive to prevent conversions in the slum.
RSS
affiliates, the Hindu YuvaSena (HYS) and the Dharma Jakran Samanvai
Samiti (DKSS) have for the past decade organised Pongal programmes in
Dharavi. Though the two main parties from Tamil Nadu — the DMK and the
AIADMK — also organise Pongal programmes, the Shiv Sena and RSS shakhas
use the festival to compete for Hindu support in Dharavi.
The
HYS and DJSS provide the participants with pots, rice, sugarcane,
stoves, turmeric and other puja items for their Pongal celebrations.
However, the invites, sent out by the HYS and the DJSS in both Tamil and
English, also inform the participants about the need to “stop religious
conversion” and “save [the] nation.”
The RSS has
functioned in Dharavi for close to three decades and its Hindutva
project gained momentum in the early 2000s when it fiercely opposed the
entry of Christian evangelists into the slum. The organisation then
began organising Pongal celebrations to “unite Hindus” as a counter to
the entry of Christian missionaries. An overwhelming majority of RSS
members in Dharavi are Tamils.
Packiadhas Kalasham
Nadar (48), originally from Kanyakumari, is the chief organiser of the
RSS’ Pongal events and anti-conversion drive in Dharavi. Mr. Nadar’s
enthusiasm stems from his own experience. He re-converted to Hinduism
from Christianity when he was 18. “The Christian missionaries manipulate
the slum-dwellers’ poverty and trick them into converting for some
benefits. We will remind them to stay away from conversion, tell them
about their traditions and values. Their real home is Hinduism,” said
Mr. Nadar.
On Thursday, as the 90 Feet Road, the
main venue for the Pongal festivities , is packed with people and Pongal
pots, the HYS will also talk about the issue of conversion from the
manch, Mr. Nadar said. RSS functionaries from Tamil Nadu have also been
invited for the “10 year grand Pongal festival.”
Beginning
with 51 pots in 2005, the HYS event has grown steadily and this year
will have 1101 pots. “There is not enough space for each Tamil household
to perform Pongal rituals in their homes, so we give space to them.
This way the Tamil culture is kept alive,” says Mr. Nadar.
The
HYS is not confined to Dharavi. This year 3000 Pongal pots are being
organised in areas with Tamil communities such as Chembur, Malad,
Matunga, Koliwada, Bhandup and Worli. “We want to make Pongal a big
event just like Ganpati festival,” says Kannan, HYS treasurer.
While
the HYS Pongal events get a huge response its anti-conversion drive has
had mixed responses. There were plenty of cases of reconversions.