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Ram Swarup (1920-98): outline of a biography
Dr Koenraad Elst
The wittiest mind in Delhi
In the long run, Ram Swarup will probably prove to have been the most
influential Hindu thinker in the second half of the 20th century. He
has, at any rate, been a crucial influence on most other Hindu
Revivalist authors of the last couple of decades.
Ram Swarup was born in 1920 as the son of a rais/banker in Sonipat,
HAryana, in the Garg gotra of the merchant Agrawal caste. He was a good
student and earned a degree in Economics from Delhi University in 1941.
He joined the Gandhian movement and acted as the overground contact
("postbox") for underground activists including Aruna Asaf Ali during
the Quit India agitation of 1942. He spent a week in custody when a
letter bearing his name was found in the house of another activist, the
later homeopath Ram Singh Rana. After his release, and until the end of
the war, he worked as a clerk in the American office in Delhi which had
been set up in the context of the Allied war effort against Japan.
In that period, his wit made him quite popular in progressive circles in
the capital. He was a declared socialist, a great fan of Aldous Huxley
and a literary imitator of George Bernard Shaw. In 1944, he started the
"Changers' Club", alluding to Karl Marx's dictum that philosophers have
interpreted the world instead of changing it. Of course, it was never
more than a discussion forum for a dozen young intellectuals, including
the future diplomat L.C. Jain, the future Planning Commission member Raj
Krishna, future Times of India editor Girilal Jain, and historian Sita
Ram Goel. At that time, Ram Swarup was a committed atheist, and in the
Changers' Club manifesto he put it in so many words: "Butter is more
important than God."
The Changers' Club published two essays, both by Ram Swarup:
Indictment,
a highly critical review of the failed 1942 Quit India movement, and
Mahatma Gandhi and His Assassin,
written immediately after the murder of the Mahatma by the Pune-based
journalist and Hindu Mahasabha activist Nathuram Godse on 30 January
1948. Written from a purely Gandhian perspective, its main thesis was
that a society of small men cannot stand the presence of such a great
man for very long: martyrdom was only befitting a man of Gandhiji's
greatness. Ram Swarup showed no interest in Godse's motives, but he did
appreciate that after the disaster of Partition, the urge to exact some
punishment somewhere, though misguided (and in targeting Gandhi,
misdirected), was a sign that Hindu society was not entirely dead, for
suffering a calamity like the Partition and swallowing it without
reaction would be a sure sign of virtual death.
At that time, the Changers' Club was already disintegrating because its
members plunged into real life, e.g. L.C. Jain became the commander of
the largest camp for Partition refugees and organized the rehabilitation
of Hindu refugees from the North-West Frontier Province in Faridabad,
outside Delhi. In 1948-49 Ram Swarup briefly worked for Gandhi's English
disciple Mira Behn (Miss Madeleine Slade) when she retired to Rishikesh
to edit her correspondence with Gandhiji. The project was not completed,
but he was to remain close to Gandhism for the rest of his life.
Anti-Communism
Just around the time of Independence, Ram Swarup developed strong
opinions about the ideology which was rapidly gaining ground among the
intelligentsia around him: Communism. His first doubts developed in
connection with purely Indian aspects of Communist policy. When the CPI
defended the Partition scheme with contrived socio-economic arguments,
he objected that the Partition would only benefit the haves among the
Muslims, not the have-nots. His doubts deepening, he moved in a
direction opposite to the ideological fashion of the day, and became one
of India's leading anti-Communists.
In 1949, Ram Swarup and Sita Ram Goel set up their own anti-Communist
think-tank in Calcutta, then as now the centre of Indian Communism. It
was called the Society for the Defence of Freedom in Asia. Among its
first publications was Ram Swarup's book Russian Imperialism: How to
Stop It, written during the conquest of China by Mao Zedong, when the
onward march of Communism seemed unstoppable. The book drew the
attention of top Congress leaders worried about Jawaharlal Nehru's
steering the country in a pro-Soviet direction.
Still in 1949, Home Minister Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel decided to set up
a think-tank specifically devoted to monitoring Communism, the
Democratic Research Service, which was formally started in November
1950.
[Related in Minoo Masani: Against the Tide, p.54.]
It was sponsored by the industrialist Birla family, and initially led by
Morarji Desai, who passed the job on to Minoo Masani (1905-98), a Parsi
and former co-founder of the Congress Socialist Party (1934), later
founder of the pro-Western Swatantra Party (1959-75). It was as
secretary of the DRS that Ram Swarup prepared a History of the Communist
Party of India, which Masani published in his own name.
A lot of bad blood developed between Masani and Ram Swarup, who quit the
DRS to join Sita Ram Goel in Calcutta. Meanwhile, the DRS continued to
be operative, but beyond publishing the meritorious periodical Freedom
First, it never became very dynamic. In his memoirs about the
anti-Communist struggle, Against the Tide, Masani did not even mention
Ram Swarup or Sita Ram Goel, much less acknowledge Ram Swarup's hand in
the History of the CPI.
There was yet another anti-Communist centre in India, the Congress for
Cultural Freedom, an international network with chapters in most
countries of the free world. In India, it published the periodical Quest
(Calcutta) and, for the Chinese public, China Report (New Delhi);
Girilal Jain was among its Indian collaborators. However, it lost all
credit when, in 1966-67, it was found out to be financed by the CIA
(though by early 1966, its financing had been taken over by the Ford
Foundation).
[See K. Vanden Berghe: "Het Congres voor de Vrijheid van de
Cultuur", Onze Alma Mater, Leuven, 1997/2, p.193-211.]
The most authentic and effective Indian centre of fact-finding and
consciousness-raising about the Communist menace was and remained
undoubtedly the Society for the Defence of Freedom in Asia. Though
routinely accused of being lavishly financed by the CIA, this
organization started with just Rs. 30,000, half of which was brought in
by Goel personally, and continued its work with the help of donations by
friends, its budget seldom exceeding Rs. 10,000. It published some
important studies, which were acclaimed by leading anti-Communists in
the West and Taiwan, and on one occasion vehemently denounced in the
Pravda and the Izvestia. Until its closing in December 1955, the centre
was the main independent focus of ideological opposition to Communism in
the Third World.
Ram Swarup's main books on Communism are:
Let us Fight the Communist Menace (1949); Russian Imperialism: How to
Stop It (1950);
Communism and Peasantry: Implications of Collectivist Agriculture for
Asian Countries (1950, but only published in 1954); Gandhism and
Communism (1954); Foundations of Maoism (1956).
His Gandhism and Communism, which emphasized the need to raise the
struggle against Communism from a military to a moral and ideological
level, was brought to the attention of Western anti-Communists including
several US Congressmen, and some of its ideas were adopted by the
Eisenhower administration in its agenda for the Geneva Conference in
1955.
Later, Arun Shourie wrote about Ram Swarup's struggle against Communism:
"Ram Swarup, now in his seventies, is a scholar of the first rank. In
the 1950s when our intellectuals were singing paeans to Marxism, and to
Mao in particular, he wrote critiques of communism and of the actual --
that is, dismal -performance of communist governments. He showed that
the 'sacrifices' which the people were being compelled to make had
nothing to do with building a new society in which at some future date
they would be heirs to milk and honey. (...) He showed that the claims
to efficiency and productivity, to equitable distribution and to high
morale which were being made by these governments, and even more so by
their apologists in countries such as India, were wholly sustainable,
that in fact they were fabrications. Today, any one reading those
critiques would characterise them as prophetic. But thirty years ago, so
noxious was the intellectual climate in India that all he got was abuse,
and ostracism."
["Fomenting reaction", in A. Shourie: Indian Controversies, p.293.]
Ram Swarup as a Hindu Revivalist
Initially, Ram Swarup saw Gandhism as the alternative to Communism, and
he has never really rejected Gandhism. He continued to explore the
relevance of Gandhism to real-life problems, e.g. in his booklet
Gandhian Economics (1977). Gandhian inspiration is also palpable in his
The Hindu View of Education (1971), the text of a speech given before
the convention of the RSS student organization Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi
Parishad. But gradually, he moved from the Gandhian version of Hinduism
to a more comprehensive understanding of the ancient Hindu tradition.
His first booklet on Hindu religion was written just after Dr. Bhimrao
Ambedkar's conversion to Buddhism in 1956: Buddhism vis-à-vis Hinduism
(1958, revised 1984). It took a moderate view of the much-debated
relation of Buddhism to its mother tradition, affirming that the Buddha
was a Hindu (just as Jesus was a Jew), but conceding that Buddhism had a
typical atmosphere setting it apart from the Hindu mainstream.
By the late 1970s, his focus had decisively turned to religious issues.
Apart from a large number of articles published in Organiser, in
Hinduism Today (Honolulu), and in some mainstream dailies (in the 1980s
the Telegraph, the Times of India and the Indian Express, in recent
years mostly the Observer of Business and Politics and the Birla
family's paper Hindustan Times), Ram Swarup's contribution to the
religious debate consists of the following books:
-
The Word as Revelation: Names of Gods (1980), on the rationale of
polytheism; Hinduism vis-à-vis Christianity and Islam (1982, revised
1992); Christianity, an Imperialist Ideology (1983, with Major T.R.
Vedantham and Sita Ram Goel);
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Understanding Islam through Hadis (1983 in the USA by Arvind Ghosh,
Houston; Indian reprint by Voice of India, 1984); in 1990, the Hindi
translation was banned;
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Foreword to a republication of D.S. Margoliouth's Mohammed and the
Rise of Islam (1985, original in 1905);
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Foreword to a republication of William Muir's The Life of Mahomet
(1992, original in 1894); Woman in Islam (1994); Hindu Dharma, Isaiat
aur Islam (1985, Hindi: "Hindu Dharma, Christianity and Islam"); Hindu
View of Christianity and Islam (1993, a republication of the
above-mentioned forewords to books on Mohammed by Muir and Margoliouth
plus an enlarged version of Hinduism vis- à-vis Christianity and
Islam); Syed Shahabuddin, who had managed to get Salman Rushdie's The
Satanic Verses banned (September 1988), made an attempt to get Hindu
View of Christianity and Islam banned as well, but a prompt reaction
by Arun Shourie in his weekly column and a petition of intellectuals
led by Prof. K.S. Lal contributed to the defeat of this attempt.
[See K. Elst: "Banning Hindu Revaluation", Observer of Business and
Politics, 1-12-1993, and S.R. Goel, ed.: Freedom of Expression, 1998].
-
Ramakrishna Mission. Search for a New Identity (1986), a critique of
the RK Mission's attempt to redefine itself as "non-Hindu";
-
Cultural Alienation and Some Problems Hinduism Faces (1987); Foreword
to Anirvan: Inner Yoga (1988, reprint 1995); Hindu-Sikh Relationship
(1985); Foreword to the republication of Sardar Gurbachan Singh Talib,
ed.: Muslim League Attack on Sikhs and Hindus in the Punjab, 1947
(1991; the original had been published in 1950 by the Shiromani
Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee, Amritsar), also separately published as
Whither Sikhism? (1991);
Hindu-Buddhist Rejoinder to Pope John-Paul II on Eastern Religions and
Yoga(1995), a rejoinder to a papal statement opposing yogic
spirituality.
Departing
Ram Swarup was a quiet and reflective type of person. He never married,
never went into business, hardly ever had a job, never stood for an
election, never joined an organization or party. When I first met him in
1990, he lived in a rooftop room in the house of the late industrialist
Hari Prasad Lohia, a sponsor of a variety of Hindu sages (including even
Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh). He had been living with the Lohia family in
their Calcutta or Delhi property since 1955; in 1996 he moved to his
late brother's house. At any rate, his biography is not very eventful
apart from his daily yoga practice and his pioneering intellectual work.
He had been in rather good health when unexpectedly, he was found dead
on his bed after his afternoon nap on 26 December 1998. The family
doctor gave brain hemorrhage as the cause of death. He left no children
but many Hindus felt orphaned when the flames consumed Ram Swarup's
earthly remains.
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