In Khunti’s charged atmosphere, VHP central organizer Milind Parande rocked a major Hindu assembly with revelations: 80 percent of tribal reservations are gobbled up by Christian converts who have shed their native customs, sidelining authentic Adivasi communities.
Delivering the keynote at Sarv Sanatan Samaj’s expansive Virat Hindu Sammelan, Parande dissected demographic dangers. Hindus, he argued, are self-sabotaging as rival populations explode. Globally outnumbered by Islamic and Christian realms, Hindus in India and Nepal must consolidate to preserve identity and traditions.
Parande wove epic tales of endurance: Lord Ram’s vanvas, the Ram Mandir saga fueled by Jharkhand’s village soil offerings. ‘This is our eternal legacy—each must champion it,’ he rallied.
He lambasted the subversion of ST provisions meant for cultural preservation, pinned on missionary influences post-1947. Citing tribal icon Kartik Oraon’s unsuccessful bill against convert quotas, Parande decried the mockery of Hindu benevolence.
RSS’s Gopal Sharma took the stage, chronicling invasions that gutted temples and morale, exacerbated by societal drift into individualism. RSS, born Vijayadashami 1925, nears its 100-year landmark, embodying dedicated nation-building. ‘Hindus are the land’s true originals,’ he proclaimed, decrying constitution-defiers and invaders’ caste rifts. With unity, he said, Hindus can repel fragmentation. The gathering swelled with VHP activists, Vanvasi Kalyan reps, and rural masses like Vinod Jaiswal and Poonam Bhengra.
