Social Sciences, asked by Maitri81851, 9 months ago

India sense of secularism is rooted in its dash and dash

Answers

Answered by ratanpriya
4

Explanation:

most amusing to watch the Sangh Parivar select its enemy at one time and drop him to pick on another when circumstances change. Until Independence, Gandhi was the prime enemy whom its ideologue, V.D. Savarkar, successfully conspired to murder. Even after his assassination, the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) and the Jana Sangh poured scorn over him; so much so that as late as on October 17, 1989, The Times of India editorially noted, “Mr. (L.K.) Advani while holding forth on ‘Bharat Mata’ now goes so far as to deny that Mahatma Gandhi was the Father of the Nation.” This is perfectly understandable. Advani’s Sangh Parivar was never a part of the freedom movement. Its leaders had collaborated with the British. Witness the umpteen apologies and undertakings their “heroic” icon Savarkar gave to the British from 1911 to 1925 and to the Nehru government in 1948 and 1950 (see A.G. Noorani; Savarkar and Hindutva; Leftword, pages 140-147).

Answered by sidhusargun910
1

Answer:

sorry

Explanation:

I don't know the answer for this question

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