Skip to main content

A white-washing of Hindu Mahasabha and RSS role? NCERT’s ‘Partition Horrors’

By Shamsul Islam 
There is a saying that when incompetent teachers are appointed, generations of students are at risk. The recent NCERT “Special Module” on Partition Horrors, released as supplementary material for Classes 6 to 8, raises precisely this concern. Framed as a resource for projects, posters, and debates, it claims to provide a historical understanding of Partition but instead promotes a selective narrative aligned with the ideological positions of the RSS.
The module was launched on August 14, 2025, as part of “Partition Horrors Remembrance Day,” an observance instituted in 2021 by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to remember the suffering of millions displaced or killed in 1947. In Modi’s own words: “Partition’s pains can never be forgotten. Millions of our sisters and brothers were displaced, and many lost their lives due to mindless hate and violence.” Yet instead of encouraging balanced reflection, the NCERT document is marked by omissions and distortions, shifting the burden of Partition onto the Muslim League and Congress while obscuring the role of Hindu Mahasabha and RSS.
One recurring theme in the module is that Partition stemmed from the “two-nation theory” articulated by Muhammad Ali Jinnah and rooted in “political Islam.” It reproduces Jinnah’s 1940 Lahore speech: “The Hindus and Muslims belong to two different religious philosophies, social customs, and literatures…they belong to two different civilizations which are based mainly on conflicting ideas and conceptions.” This is presented as the origin of Partition. What the NCERT fails to mention is that Hindu nationalists had long advanced the same conception.
As early as 1923, V. D. Savarkar declared in his book Hindutva: “Christians and Mohamedan communities…cannot be recognized as Hindus…Their heroes and their hero worship, their fairs and their festivals, their ideals and their outlook on life have now ceased to be common with ours.” Later, in his 1937 presidential address to the Hindu Mahasabha, he made it explicit: “There are two nations in the main: the Hindus and the Moslems, in India.”
The RSS echoed this view right up to independence. On August 14, 1947, the eve of freedom, its mouthpiece Organiser editorialized: “In Hindusthan only the Hindus form the nation and the national structure must be built on that safe and sound foundation.” Such pronouncements show that the two-nation idea was not an exclusive creation of Jinnah or the Muslim League but was deeply embedded in Hindu nationalist thought.
The module also attempts to portray the Muslim League as representative of all Indian Muslims. While the League did win 73 out of 78 Muslim seats in the 1946 Constituent Assembly elections, this was under a restricted franchise. Granville Austin notes: “Only 28.5 percent of the adult population of the provinces could vote in the provincial assembly elections of early 1946…Economically and socially depressed portions of the population were virtually disenfranchised.” Among Muslims the proportion was even lower, as in Bihar, where only 7.8 percent of the Muslim population could vote. To describe the League as speaking for all Muslims ignores this context.
Another distortion is the suggestion that Congress leaders were chiefly responsible for Partition. The NCERT states: “For the first time Indian leaders themselves willingly handed over vast part of the country permanently outside the national fold…without even their consent.” Yet the same document acknowledges that both Patel and Nehru saw Partition as unavoidable in the face of mounting violence. Patel called it “a bitter medicine,” while Nehru described it as “bad but inevitable.” Gandhi too, who had long opposed Partition, reluctantly conceded once Patel and Nehru accepted it.
The role of Hindu Mahasabha in collaborating with the Muslim League is conspicuously absent. In 1942, Savarkar defended Hindu Mahasabha-League coalition governments, stating: “Witness the fact that only recently in Sind, the Sind-Hindu-Sabha…joined hands with the League itself in running coalition Government. The case of Bengal is well known.” At the very moment Congress was launching the Quit India movement, Mahasabha leaders were sharing power with Jinnah’s party.
The NCERT also downplays the role of the British in engineering Partition. It presents Mountbatten as someone simply carrying out Indian leaders’ wishes, quoting him as saying: “I did not Partition India…My role was to execute it in the most peaceful way possible.” Such claims obscure decades of “divide and rule” policy. Radcliffe, who drew the borders in just five weeks, admitted: “I had no alternative, the time at my disposal was so short that I could not do a better job.” But the consequences of this haste—mass killings and displacement—are treated with undue leniency.
Perhaps most glaring is the silence on the role of Hindu nationalist organizations in Partition violence. Sardar Patel, writing to RSS chief Golwalkar on September 11, 1948, was clear: “Organizing the Hindus and helping them is one thing but going in for revenge on innocent and helpless men, women and children is quite another…As a final result of the poison, the country had to suffer the sacrifice of the invaluable life of Gandhiji.” Yet NCERT avoids mentioning this, though it readily condemns Muslim League militias.
The wider truth, as B. R. Ambedkar observed in Pakistan or the Partition of India, was that Jinnah and Savarkar were not opposites but allies in theory: “Mr. Savarkar and Mr. Jinnah instead of being opposed to each other on the one nation versus two nations issue are in complete agreement…Both agree, not only agree but insist that there are two nations in India.” Rammanohar Lohia was equally forthright: “The Hindu communalists who shouted loudest for Akhand Bharat helped Britain and the Muslim League partition the country. They did almost everything to estrange Hindus and Muslims from each other.”
The NCERT’s module reflects an ideological project of selective memory. By exonerating Hindu Mahasabha and RSS, minimizing colonial responsibility, and overstating Congress culpability, it fails to provide students with a truthful understanding of India’s most traumatic division. The tragedy of Partition deserves sober reflection, not partisan rewriting.
---
Links to Shamsul Islam’s writings and video interviews/debates:  
http://du-in.academia.edu/ShamsulIslam;  Facebook: https://facebook.com/shamsul.islam.33;   Twitter: @shamsforjustice; http://shamsforpeace.blogspot.com/.
Link for procuring Shamsul Islam’s books:  
https://tinyurl.com/shams-books

Comments

Anonymous said…
Rejoinder to the above article:
Rejoinder: Not true, RSS has no role whatsoever in preparing NCERT textbooks
https://www.counterview.net/2025/08/rejoinder-not-true-rss-has-no-role.html

TRENDING

When democracy becomes a performance: The Tibetan exile experience

By Tseten Lhundup*  I was born in Bylakuppe, one of the largest Tibetan settlements in southern India. From childhood, I grew up in simple barracks, along muddy roads, and in fields with limited resources. Over the years, I have watched our democratic system slowly erode. Observing the recent budget session of the 17th Tibetan Parliament-in-Exile, these “democratic procedures” appear grand and orderly on the surface, yet in reality they amount to little more than empty formalities. The parliamentarians seem largely disconnected from the everyday struggles faced by ordinary exiled Tibetans like us.

Study links sanctions to 500,000 deaths annually leading to rise in global backlash

By Bharat Dogra  International opinion is increasingly turning against the expanding burden of sanctions imposed on a growing number of countries. These measures are contributing to humanitarian crises, intensifying domestic discord, and heightening international tensions, thereby increasing the risks of conflicts and wars. 

Dhurandhar: The Revenge — Blurring the line between fiction and political narrative

By Mohd. Ziyaullah Khan*  "Dhurandhar: The Revenge" does not wait to be remembered; it arrives almost on the heels of its predecessor, released on March 19, 2026, just months after the first film’s December 2025 debut. The speed of its arrival feels less like creative urgency and more like calculated timing—cinema responding not to storytelling rhythm but to the emotional climate of its audience. Director Aditya Dhar, along with actor Yami Gautam, appears acutely aware of this moment and how to harness it.

Beyond the island: Top mythologist reorients the geography of the Ramayana

By Jag Jivan   In a compelling new analysis that challenges conventional geographical assumptions about the ancient epic, writer and mythologist Devdutt Pattanaik has traced the roots of the Ramayana to the forests and river systems of Central and Eastern India, rather than the peninsular south or the modern island nation of Sri Lanka.

BJP accounts for 99% of political donations in Gujarat: Corporate giants dominate

By Jag Jivan   An analysis of the official data on donations received by national parties from Gujarat during the Financial Year 2024-25 reveals a staggering concentration of funding, with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) accounting for nearly the entirety of the contributions. The data, compiled in a document titled "National Parties donations received from Gujarat during FY-2024-25," lists thousands of transactions, painting a detailed picture of the financial backing for political parties from one of India’s most industrially significant states.

Alarming decline in India's repair culture threatens circular economy goals: Study

By Jag Jivan  A comprehensive new study by environmental research and advocacy organisation Toxics Link has painted a worrying picture of India's fading repair culture, warning that the trend towards replacement over repair is accelerating the country's already critical e-waste crisis.

Captains extraordinaire: Ranking cricket’s most influential skippers

By Harsh Thakor*  Ranking the greatest cricket captains is a subjective exercise, often sparking passionate debate among fans. The following list is not merely a tally of wins and losses; it is an assessment of leadership’s deeper impact. My criteria fuse a captain’s playing record with their tactical skill, placing the highest consideration on their ability to reshape a team’s fortunes and inspire those around them. A captain who inherited a dominant empire is judged differently from one who resurrected a nation’s cricket from the doldrums. With that in mind, here is my perspective on the finest leaders the game has ever seen.

Swami Vivekananda's views on caste and sexuality were 'painfully' regressive

By Bhaskar Sur* Swami Vivekananda now belongs more to the modern Hindu mythology than reality. It makes a daunting job to discover the real human being who knew unemployment, humiliation of losing a teaching job for 'incompetence', longed in vain for the bliss of a happy conjugal life only to suffer the consequent frustration.

‘No merit’ in Chakraborty’s claims: Personal ethics talk sans details raises questions

By Jag Jivan  A recent opinion piece published in The Quint by Subhash Chandra Garg has raised questions over the circumstances surrounding the resignation of Atanu Chakraborty from HDFC Bank , with Garg stating that the exit “raises doubts about his own ‘ethics’.” Garg, currently Chief Policy Advisor at Subhanjali and former Secretary of the Department of Economic Affairs, Government of India, writes that the Reserve Bank of India ( RBI ) appears to find no substance in Chakraborty’s claims, noting, “It is clear the RBI sees no merit in Atanu Chakraborty’s wild and vague assertions.”