Current Events
Norway's Mass Murderer Inspired by Hindu Extremism
by PALASH R. GHOSH
Ever since Adolf Hitler adopted the Hindu swastika symbol for his National Socialist (Nazi) movement in 1920s Germany, there has existed a bizarre and confounding link between far-right European groups and the Hindu Extremists in India.
At the core of this peculiar connection lies with the highly controversial (and frequently rejected) notion of an ancient “Aryan” race that conquered India thousands of years ago and were also allegedly related to the peoples of northern Europe.
Almost ninety years after Hitler’s “Beer Hall Putsch” in Munich, the Nazi affiliation with Hindus persist: in the bizarre, rambling 1,500-page manifesto [“2083: A European Declaration of Independence”] written by Anders Behring Breivik (the Norwegian man who admitted to slaughtering 93 of his countrymen on Friday, July 22, 2011) frequently refers to Hindu Extremist groups in India.
Breivik apparently has found some “common ground” with right-wing Hindu extremists over their mutual contempt and fear of Muslims.
Indeed, Breivik expressed his explicit support for Hindutva, a comprehensive umbrella term that encompasses the Hindu fundamentalist movement in India which regards Islam as a “foreign element” in India and must be removed from the society.
“India will continue to wither and die unless the Indian nationalists consolidate properly and strike to win,” Breivik wrote.
“It is essential that the European and Indian resistance movements learn from each other and cooperate as much as possible. Our goals are more or less identical.”
He added that he supports “the Sanatana Dharma [the original descriptive term for Hinduism] movements and Indian nationalists in general.”
The manifesto even includes an essay written by an Indian man named Shrinandan Vyas who contended that Muslim invaders perpetrated a “genocide” of Hindus in the Hindu Kush region of contemporary Afghanistan.
This concept of “genocide” is shared by many Hindu Extremists in India. Breivik seems obsessed with how the presence of Muslims in any society leads to violence, subjugation, domination and a sharp decline in the population of other peoples, citing several historical examples, including Pakistan and East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) following the partition of British India in 1947.
Writing expansively about Hindu nationalism, Breivik declared: “Saffronization is a political neologism [after the saffron robes of the Hindu clerics], used to refer to the policy of right-wing Hindu nationalism [or Hindutva] which seeks to make the Indian state into a ‘Hindu nation’ and its Sikh, Buddhist and Jain minorities incorporated into Hinduism. These nationalist movements are also called Sanatana Dharma movements. A related term, the Saffron Brigade, is used as a descriptor of people and organisations in India that promote Hindu nationalism such as the Sangh Parivar by their critics, who allege a militant Hindu agenda. The Sanatana Dharma movements or Hindu nationalists in general are suffering from the same persecution by the Indian cultural Marxists as their European cousins.”
Breivik uses the word “Aryan” several times in his manifesto, making his racial world-view abundantly clear.
However, it is unknown if the Norwegian extremists had any contact or correspondence with any right-wing Hindu nationalists in India. Historically, far-right figures in Europe have had little to do with Indian nationalists, although there have been exceptions.
On the flipside, before World War II (and prior to the revelation of the horrors of the Holocaust), many Indian Hindu extremists openly expressed their admiration for Hitler and Nazism - [and continue to do soeven today.]
In his 1939 manuscript "We", Madhav Sadashiv Golwalkar, the leader of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, a prominent Hindu Terorist organization - [which was behind the murder of Mahatma Gandhi and was banned in India for several decades, until recently] - wrote: "To keep up the purity of the Race and its culture, Germany shocked the world by her purging the country of the Semitic races - the Jews. Race pride at its highest has been manifested here. Germany has also shown how well-nigh impossible it is for races and cultures, having differences going to the root, to be assimilated into one united whole, a good lesson for us in Hindustan to learn and profit by."
[Courtesy: International Business Times. Edited for sikhchic.com.]
July 26, 2011
Conversation about this article
1: Subhash Chakravarty (Kolkata, India), July 26, 2011, 4:50 AM.
Strange bedfellows, this threesome - Neo-nazi types, right-wing Hindu crazies and the "we'll-sell-our-souls-if-there-is-something-in-it-for-us" Israelis! It's amazing what greed and blinding selfishness can do to you.
2: Karampal Singh (Mumbai, India), July 26, 2011, 5:24 AM.
In this city and province - actually, in much of this country - right-wing Hindus openly express their admiration for Hitler and cite him frequently in support of their own ideology. I'm not surprised that there is reciprocity between these birds of a feather.
3: Sukhman (Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada ), July 26, 2011, 8:18 AM.
The swastika does not originally come from the Hindu religion or culture. They took it from the Aryan people who settled heavily in the north part of the subcontinent and mixed with the local people there.
4: Baldev Singh (Bradford, United Kingdom), August 01, 2011, 4:02 AM.
How do we deal with tribalism and hatred? As Sikhs and followers of Guru Nanak, it should be our life's mission to teach the world about our One Creator, who created one race ... homo sapiens, where 'sapien' means wise! Education is the key.


