Showing posts with label Sanatan Sanstha. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sanatan Sanstha. Show all posts

Aug 9, 2016

A fringe Hindu group that believes in a divine kingdom is suspected in the deaths of Indian secularists

August 7, 2016

Parth M.N.

 

Abhay Vartak aspires to live in a divine kingdom in which everyone is truthful and virtuous, leaving no room for violence or crime. Justice would be dispensed by a benevolent king, as it was during the rule of the Hindu god Ram, according to mythological Hindu texts.

Vartak, who holds a bachelor’s degree in science, is the spokesman of Sanatan Sanstha, a radical Hindu organization in India that aims to establish the kingdom by 2023. According to its newsletter, Sanatan Prabhat, the intervening years will be a time of psychological and physical battles against evil forces that will prepare people for the advent of the holy kingdom.

Asked to define the evil forces, Vartak described them as people who develop “increased egos and personality defects and can’t lead a normal life.”

The Hindu fringe group, with its cult-like beliefs and behaviors, has a following in three states in southwestern India. It has emerged as the prime suspect behind the murders of three prominent secular thinkers in recent years.

Indian authorities in June arrested a Sanatan member in connection with the 2013 assassination of activist Narendra Dabholkar. In September, another Sanatan member was arrested for the 2015 killing of author and politician Govind Pansare, 81.

The Central Bureau of Investigation, India’s FBI, said the weapons used in those two killings matched those used in the 2015 deadly attack against a third prominent secular figure, academic M.M. Kalburgi. In all three slayings, the killers accosted their victims on motorbikes.

All the victims had come into conflict with orthodox Hindus. Dabholkar, 68, had led a campaign in the western state of Maharashtra to pass an anti-superstition bill aimed at reducing the influence of gurus and so-called godmen.

Pansare wrote a biography of Shivaji, a beloved 17th century warrior-king, that emphasized his religious tolerance and acceptance of minority Muslims into his army.

Kalburgi spoke out against religious superstition and blind faith before being shot in September at his home in Karnataka state.

Sanatan denies any link to the killings, but investigators say they found incriminating emails on a laptop belonging to one of the suspects, Virendra Tawde, the alleged mastermind of the Dabholkar assassination.

CBI officials said the emails suggest that Sanatan was attempting to organize an army of 15,000 people against “anti-Hindu forces.” One former Sanatan member has told the CBI and investigators from Maharashtra’s state police that Tawde approached him asking for two revolvers and had dispatched men to track Dabholkar and Pansare.

The day after Dabholkar was shot, Sanatan’s newsletter ran a front-page statement saying that his death was a blessing. Pansare later received an anonymous letter that read, “You will meet Dabholkar’s fate.”

Violence by Hindu groups receives less attention than other forms of extremism in India, an overwhelmingly Hindu nation of 1.25 billion people. Sanatan’s official text says, “violence against evil is not violence.”

Vartak says the group teaches self-defense, but not the use of dangerous weapons. But according to a media report, a Sanatan worker told anti-terrorism police of a 2009 meeting where an explosives demonstration was held and one member said Hindus needed to learn to shoot rifles because they were being oppressed.

Established as a charitable trust in 1990 by hypnotherapist Jayant Athavle, Sanatan is based in the coastal state of Goa and maintains strict secrecy around the ashrams it operates.

Its website claims that long hair can reduce sperm count in men. Members refer to Athavle as “his holiness,” and believe that a special scent emanates from one of his fingers.

According to associates, Athavle lived in London in the 1970s, where he learned to practice a form of hypnosis developed by Milton H. Erickson, an American psychiatrist.

Shyam Manav, 64, a practicing hypnotherapist and anti-superstition activist, said he referred patients to Athavle around 1990 only to have them come back upset, complaining he had advised them to cure their health problems through prayer.

Manav reduced his contact with Athavle. A few years later, he learned that Athavle had acquired vibrating alarm clocks – then a luxury item in India – from overseas and tricked unsuspecting people in rural Maharashtra into thinking he caused the devices to shake merely by staring at them.

“At that point I realized Athavle had renounced honesty as well,” Manav said.

In 2008 Sanatan members were arrested in connection with a bombing outside a theater screening a film about the Mughal king Akbar, where seven were injured, and another outside an auditorium showing a satire of Hindu mythology.

Two Sanatan members were sentenced to 10 years imprisonment in 2011 but were released on bail two years later.  

In 2009, six Sanatan devotees were arrested for a blast near a church in Goa. The explosives detonated prematurely, killing two Sanatan members who were carrying them on a motorbike. The six were acquitted on legal technicalities – but two men who allegedly masterminded the plot are wanted in connection with the recent killings.

In 2011 the Maharashtra state government submitted a lengthy dossier to New Delhi, calling for a ban on the group. The request was ignored, and the group continues to operate.

Investigative journalist Rana Ayyub, who has followed Sanatan, said that some Muslim groups accused of less serious crimes – such as the Students Islamic Movement in India – have been outlawed, suggesting a double standard when it comes to organizations with Hindu roots.

“While [Hindu militancy] is as much of a danger as other forms of terrorism, it is sadly still considered an aberration and not a norm,” Ayyub said. 

Ayyub, who in 2009 disguised herself to gain entry into Sanatan’s sprawling ashram in Goa, described an atmosphere full of ritual and confusing practices. Children roamed around seemingly in a trance, wearing white stickers on their foreheads to supposedly ward off evil spirits, she said. A saffron-colored map was laid out, marking the group’s purported kingdom.

“They have their own world, their own pledge, their own way of life,” Ayyub said. “It all seemed very dangerous.”

Parth M.N. is a special correspondent.

http://www.latimes.com/world/la-fg-india-hindu-extremists-snap-story.html

 

Oct 28, 2015

Indian utopian sect under scrutiny as religious tolerance debate rages

Rupam Jain Nair and Frank Jack Daniel
Reuters
October 26, 2015


Sananta Sanstha ashram
Sananta Sanstha ashram

PONDA, India (Reuters) - The arrest of a member of India's Sanatan Sanstha sect following the murder of a well-known atheist has prompted renewed calls from some politicians to ban the Hindu group, as concerns grow the country's tradition of religious tolerance is being eroded.

Opening the doors of its Goa headquarters to foreign journalists for the first time this month, Sanatan Sanstha told Reuters it had nothing to do with the February murder of Govind Pansare, and its mission was opposed to violence in all forms.

Instead, its members are preparing for the advent of a divine Hindu kingdom in India within eight years.

"The aim is to prepare people for a divine kingdom, or Ram Rajya, by 2023," said Durgesh Shankar Samant, a founding member of the group that believes India's secular democracy has failed. "Right now an awakening is going on."

The movement, which claims thousands of followers and produces newspapers, books and websites, is one of a number of Hindu groups that are growing in prominence.

Emboldened by the return to power of the mainstream Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the groups have taken up causes with renewed vigor, including the protection from slaughter of cows they consider to be sacred.

In recent weeks, three Muslims were killed for allegedly killing cows; one of the murders sparked violent protests in the Muslim-majority region of Kashmir.

And in attacks reminiscent of a spate of killings of secular bloggers in neighboring Bangladesh, Pansare was one of three prominent Indian atheists to have been slain, two this year.

Pansare was known for attacking discrimination, superstition, caste politics and religious fundamentalism.

President Pranab Mukherjee, an apolitical figurehead, has publicly voiced concerns that multi-faith India, dominated by Hindus but with sizeable minorities including around 180 million Muslims, is becoming less tolerant.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has spoken against the lynching by a Hindu mob of a man near Delhi, and more generally called for peace between Hindus and Muslims.

But critics said the BJP leader's response was too slow at a time when religious polarization could favor his party as it fights an important state election.

At the Sanstha's retreat, a three-storey white building that overlooks a lush valley, volunteers known as seekers work at flat screens on a suite of publications.

The content produced by volunteers in Goa, mostly young women, covers everything from the length of hair and style of clothes to best capture cosmic vibrations, to black energy emitted by Western birthday cakes.

It also strays into the political.

After the 2013 murder of Narendra Dabholkar, an atheist who founded a group of self-styled rationalists, its daily newspaper published an article calling his death a "blessing from God."

"Life and death are a matter of fate. Every person gets the result of his actions," the paper wrote.

Neither Sanatan Sanstha nor any of its members have been implicated in the murder.

The sect was founded in 1990 by hypnotist Jayant Balaji Athavale, who followers say is an incarnation of the Hindu god Vishnu.

Seekers have spirituality measured in percentage terms, and once they reach 70 percent they can call themselves saints.

Sanatan Sanstha hopes to open a university to teach people this technique, and uses electronic instruments to photograph "auras" that Samant said were able to strengthen around people and objects in line with the group's version of Hindu practices.

Athavale, reportedly in his 70s, is rarely seen in public, although the group does print his pronouncements.

Hindu Janajagruti Samiti, a political organization drawn mainly from Sanatan Sanstha ranks, last year published Athavale's thoughts on slaughtering cows.

"Hindus, who are indifferent towards cow-slaughter and attacks on 'Gou-rakshaks' (saviors of cows), are not fit to live," Athavale is quoted as saying. (http://www.hindujagruti.org/quotes/39720.html)

GROUP UNDER SCRUTINY

Public scrutiny of Sanatan Sanstha increased after police arrested one of its workers in September as a suspect in the February shooting of Pansare.

The worker, Sameer Gaikwad, has not been charged and Sanatan Sanstha says he is innocent.

India's counter terrorism National Investigation Agency (NIA) has named another follower of the group, fugitive Rudra Patil, as chief suspect.

Patil was already on the NIA's "most wanted" list in connection with bomb blasts near a religious procession in 2009.

Hindu Janajagruti Samiti spokesman Ramesh Shinde said Patil should turn himself in.

Sanatan Sanstha says the group has not been named by courts, it opposes violence and its members have been unfairly accused.

But brushes with the law and sometimes outspoken publications have triggered calls for successive governments to ban it, including fresh demands from politicians from the southern state of Goa and neighboring Maharashtra.

Junior home minister Kiren Rijiju said the last government chose not to ban the group, and that Goa, Maharashtra and Karnataka had not presented him with new evidence to act on.

"Any organization that is perpetrating any kind of violence ... you've got to be concerned about, but to ban an organization, you have to have a basis," he said.

(Additional reporting by Shilpa Jamkhandikar in Mumbai; Jatindra Dash in Bhubaneshwar; Sandhya Ravishankar in Chennai; Editing by Mike Collett-White)

http://news.yahoo.com/indian-utopian-sect-under-scrutiny-religious-tolerance-debate-211650796.html