New Delhi: Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) Chief Mohan Bhagwat, on Sunday, criticised the move to lay a foundation stone for a Babri Masjid-like structure in West Bengal, calling it a “political conspiracy” aimed at reviving a settled dispute for electoral gains.
His remarks assume significance as they come nearly months ahead of the high-stakes West Bengal Assembly elections scheduled in 2026.
Addressing a programme at the Science City auditorium in Kolkata, RSS Chief Bhagwat said the Ayodhya dispute had been resolved through a long legal process and a Supreme Court order, following which the Ram Temple was constructed.
“The matter is closed. Now, trying to rebuild the Babri Masjid and restart the dispute is a political strategy being carried out for vested interests. This is being done for votes; it is neither for Hindus nor for Muslims,” he said, without naming the Trinamool Congress (TMC).
The RSS Chief was reacting to the controversial move by suspended TMC MLA Humayun Kabir, who laid the foundation stone for a Babri Masjid-like mosque in Beldanga in West Bengal’s Murshidabad district.
RSS Chief Bhagwat termed the act a deliberate provocation and warned that such attempts to reopen old wounds could damage social harmony.
“This should not happen,” he asserted.
Clarifying the RSS’s position on the matter, RSS Chief Bhagwat stressed that the organisation is not against Muslims and that its primary objective is Hindu unity, not political mobilisation.
He cautioned against viewing the Sangh through the prism of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), calling it a “huge mistake”.
“The RSS has no political agenda. Comparing it to political entities only leads to misunderstandings,” he said.
RSS Chief Bhagwat also underlined that governments should not use public funds to build religious structures.
Citing the reconstruction of the Somnath Temple and the Ram Mandir, he said both were built through public contributions, not government money.
Touching upon broader issues in West Bengal, RSS Chief Bhagwat expressed concern over rising Islamic extremism, incidents of violence against Hindus, and illegal infiltration, as well as the plight of Hindus in Bangladesh.
He appealed to the Hindus in India and abroad to support their “persecuted brethren”.
Manipur will take time to heal
RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat on Sunday said that it will take time to resolve differences among warring groups in ethnic strife-torn Manipur, asserting that peace will ultimately prevail in the northeastern state.
Bhagwat, who recently visited Manipur, said he had held talks with all tribal and social leaders as well as youth representatives in the northeastern state.
He said that the disturbances, which are mainly law and order problems, are abating slowly and will end within about a year.
“But bridging the minds is a great task and it will take time,” he said, asserting that the only way is to have dialogue and bring the warring groups to “one page”.
“That can be done, because basically the spirit is already there,” the RSS chief said at a programme held here to celebrate the centenary of the Sangh.
“We could do it in Arunachal, Meghalaya, we are doing it in Nagaland and other places,” he said.
Bhagwat said that the RSS has around 100 shakhas in Manipur.
Maintaining that peace will ultimately prevail in Manipur, he said, “But definitely it will take time.” Asked by one of the participants in the lecture and interaction programme as to why the Sangh is maintaining a distance with the top BJP leadership, the RSS chief said that the Sangh has always maintained a distance with the saffron party.
“We stay very distant from all BJP leaders,” he said, hastening to add, “We have always been close to Narendra bhai (PM Modi), Amit bhai (Union Home Minister Shah).” Both the leaders are known to be close to the Sangh and PM Modi was earlier a pracharak of the organisation.
He said such narratives over relations between the RSS and the BJP leadership are not to be taken into account, maintaining that the Sangh is a clean organisation and it does not hide its relations with anyone, be it of any political outfit. IANS/PTI