RSS Leader: 99.9% of Indian Muslims Descended from Hindus, Part of Our Society

RSS General Secretary Dattatreya Hosabale stated that 99.9% of Indian Muslims are descendants of Indian-origin Hindus and remain part of the society. He emphasized that while they changed their religion, their nationality and civilizational roots remain Indian. Hosabale called for continuous dialogue with Muslim leadership to remove tensions caused by political interests. He also highlighted illegal infiltration and demographic changes as internal security threats.

Key Points: RSS Leader: 99.9% of Indian Muslims Are Hindu Descendants

  • RSS leader says 99.9% of Indian Muslims are descendants of Hindus
  • Calls Muslims part of society despite religious change
  • Emphasizes dialogue with Muslim leadership to remove misgivings
  • Points to illegal infiltration and demographic change as internal security threats
4 min read

"99.9% of Muslims in India are descendants of Indian-origin Hindus, they are part and parcel of our society": RSS leader Hosabale

RSS General Secretary Dattatreya Hosabale says 99.9% of Indian Muslims are descendants of Hindus, part of society. He calls for dialogue to remove tensions.

"99.9% of the Muslims in India are descendants of the Indian-origin Hindus. They are part and parcel of our society. - Dattatreya Hosabale"

By Reena Bhardwaj, Washington DC, April 24

Stating that 99.9% of the Muslims in India are descendants of the Indian origin Hindus and are part and parcel of the society, RSS General Secretary Dattatreya Hosabale, who is in the United States, has said that but they might have changed mode of worship but not nationality or civilisational roots and that RSS has been engaged in a dialogue for the last few years to remove any misgivings.

In an exclusive interview with ANI, Hosabale said that there is a need to remove any tensions that emerge due to machinations and political interests.

"The forefathers of Indian Muslims were Indians; they had been Hindus. So, 99.9% of the Muslims in India are descendants of the Indian-origin Hindus. So, we feel and we believe that they are part and parcel of our society. They might have changed their mode of worship and their religion but they have not changed their nationality or civilisational roots," he said.

"This is what we have been conveying. Because of certain other mechanisations and political interests, there have been some tensions on and off and that has to be removed. That is why, a continuous and comprehensive dialogue with the Muslim leadership is also required. That RSS has engaged in in the last few years, in order to remove these misgivings, if at all it is there," he added.

He was asked what Muslims mean for the RSS and the community's perception for the organization.

Asked about the biggest internal security threat for India and RSS' role in fighting it, Hosabale pointed to illegal infiltration from the eastern border and demographic change in some areas.

"Within India, there are a lot of diversity. Playing upon these diversities and putting one against another for political interests, that creates problems. Within this Indian society, illegal infiltration on the eastern border mainly has definitely been considered to be a matter of internal security by governments," he said.

"The demographic change that is taking place has its own tensions in society. Today, it is not too much of a security issue but the change of demography in some sections would definitely create social tensions," he said.

Hosabale said that RSS has been organizing society, encouraging people to work for the nation and engage in community service.

The RSS General Secretary said that he had attended two conferences in the United States and interacted with various sections of American society, including people of Indian origin and Americans who are in academics and establishment and think tanks.

"I think most of them may not know India and the socio-cultural situations of India, what the various inter-places in society. So, perceptions are made because of... many a time because of misunderstandings, a lack of information and also a lack of communication on the part of people from India. So, I thought it's better to communicate directly with them. Perception side, you know that RSS is a socio-cultural movement of people and it creates volunteers and they engage themselves in the national building activities," he said.

He was asked about the perception around RSS and his public outreach in the United States.

Hosabale said Hudson Institute invited him for New India conference and discussed with him about the RSS.

"I had come for two conferences, one at Stanford University campus - the GSIF, Global Science Innovation Forum. They had also invited me to speak on science, society, and civilisational leadership. So, I thought this was an opportunity to express on behalf of Hindu society and also behalf of the organisation which I represent," he said.

"It's good we could reach out to various sections of American society - both of Indian origin and also Americans who are in academics and establishment, think tanks and so on. I could tell them what the RSS is doing for the last 100 years, we have been organising the society and encouraging the people to work for the nation and to engage themselves in community service...how RSS works and what is its philosophy, I could explain to them," he added.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Finally, a sensible statement from a prominent Sangh leader! 🙏 This is what we need - recognition that we're all part of the same civilisational fabric. My grandmother used to tell me stories from her village in UP where Hindus and Muslims celebrated each other's festivals. Let's move past the politics and focus on our common heritage.
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Michael C
As an American trying to understand Indian politics, this is fascinating. The tension between acknowledging shared history while also addressing issues like illegal immigration is complex. Hosabale's call for dialogue seems constructive, but the demographic change remark sounds worrying. India's diversity is amazing - hope you all can find a way to keep it harmonious.
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Arjun K
Bhai, this is pure political optics. RSS has been saying one thing in English media and another on the ground. Talk to Muslims in Gujarat or Delhi who face discrimination daily. Words are cheap. If RSS really believes this, let them start with stopping hate speech by their own affiliated groups. 🙄
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Sarah B
I'm a British historian who studies South Asia. This statement is actually remarkably inclusive for an RSS leader. It acknowledges that India's Muslim population is indigenous, not foreign. That's a big step from the "Mughal invaders" narrative. But actions matter more than words - let's see if this translates into real policy changes.
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Ananya R
This is the right message for unity. Whether Hindu or Muslim, we are all children of this soil. My best friend in college was a Muslim girl from Hyderabad - her family has been there for 400 years! We need more leaders who talk like this. But Hosabale ji should also condemn actual violence against minorities, not just talk about dialogue

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