RSS Leader Vaidya: India Must Define Identity Before Setting National Priorities

RSS joint general secretary Dr Manmohan Vaidya addressed the Delhi Shabdotsav 2026, stressing the need for a Swadeshi mindset and pride in heritage. He argued that a nation must first understand its identity before it can determine its priorities and policy directions. Vaidya cited Samuel Huntington and Rabindranath Tagore to underscore the ongoing debate about India's singular name and essence. He also referenced a historical Chinese ambassador's remark about India's prolonged cultural influence to highlight the importance of self-knowledge.

Key Points: RSS's Manmohan Vaidya on India's Identity, Swadeshi Mindset

  • Swadeshi mindset for youth
  • Identity defines national priorities
  • Post-2014 as cultural independence
  • Single name debate: India or Bharat
  • Cultural influence over China
2 min read

Can't determine our priorities without understanding our identity: Dr Manmohan Vaidya at Shabdotsav 2026

RSS joint general secretary Dr Manmohan Vaidya emphasizes understanding Indian identity to shape foreign, defence, education & economic policies.

Can't determine our priorities without understanding our identity: Dr Manmohan Vaidya at Shabdotsav 2026
"Until we decide who and what we are, our foreign policy, defence policy, education policy, and economic policy cannot function in accordance with our own vision. - Dr Manmohan Vaidya"

New Delhi, Jan 4

Dr Manmohan Vaidya, RSS joint general secretary was one of the distinguished speakers to participate in the final day deliberations of Delhi Shabdotsav 2026 event, held at city's Major Dhyan Chand stadium.

Dr Vaidya emphasised on the importance of inculcating a Swadeshi mindset among people particularly youth and taking pride in one's roots and heritage.

Sharing his thoughts on the Indian identity, he said that every Indian should first understand who we are.

Dr Vaidya, referring to the book 'Who Are We?' by American political scientist and author Samuel Huntington, said, "In the book, the author states that as a nation and a society, we must determine who we are. Until we do this, we cannot determine our priorities and direction."

He stated, "Rabindranath Tagore, in his book 'Swadeshi Samaj,' wrote that first and foremost, we must become what we are. We must know who we are. There is no country in the world that has two names. Every country has only one name, but here in India, the debate is still ongoing: are we India or Bharat?"

Further elucidating the concept, he said, "There is a country next door called Brahmadesh, which later became Burma and then Myanmar, but now it is only referred to as Myanmar. It is still known by a single name. Until we decide who and what we are, our foreign policy, defence policy, education policy, and economic policy cannot function in accordance with our own vision."

"Even after Independence, we continued to imitate the West. After the 2014 election results, the English newspaper 'The Guardian' wrote in its editorial that May 18, 2014, will be specially recorded in the history of India as the day the British truly left India. Therefore, if we want to determine India's direction and play our role in the world, we must first understand who we are," he added.

The RSS joint general secretary further spoke of a Chinese ambassador's candid admission in America named Hu Shih.

"The Chinese ambassador famously said that without sending a single soldier, India dominated China culturally and spiritually for 2,000 years. Therefore, it is essential for us to understand India," he pointed out.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
Interesting perspective. The name debate (India vs Bharat) seems symbolic of a deeper search for identity. As someone who has lived here for 5 years, I see a young nation confidently rediscovering its ancient roots while building a modern future.
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Priya S
While I agree we must take pride in our heritage, I respectfully disagree that we need a single, rigid definition of "who we are." India's strength has always been its diversity and ability to assimilate. Our identity is plural, and that's our superpower.
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Vikram M
The point about cultural influence is key. For centuries, we were the "Vishwaguru". We didn't conquer lands, we won minds through philosophy, mathematics, and spirituality. That's the soft power we need to rebuild. Let's focus on that, not just the name.
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Rohit P
True yaar. We copy everything from the West - from our education system to our lifestyle. When will we make policies that actually suit *our* people and *our* ground realities? First know thyself, as they say.
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Ananya R
As a young Indian, I feel this deeply. We're stuck between ancient culture and global modernity. We need to craft a unique Indian modernity that's rooted but not regressive. The answer isn't in the past, but in reinterpreting it for the future.

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