The rise of Hindu Rashtra and the southern call for separation FOR many in India’s Bahujan communities—OBCs, Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and minorities—the idea of a Hindu Rashtra is no longer abstract speculation. It is a looming threat to the very foundation of the republic. The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and its affiliates have spent decades building an ideological infrastructure that, critics argue, seeks to replace the egalitarian promise of the 1950 Constitution with a hierarchical order rooted in Brahmanical tradition. In this vision, the Manusmriti—once publicly burned by B.R. Ambedkar as a symbol of caste oppression—would become the de facto social constitution, with Brahmins and upper castes at the apex and Bahujans reduced to a subordinate, servile status. The fear is stark: if Hindutva forces succeed in consolidating a majoritarian state, the Constitution’s core principles—equality before the law, abolition of untouchability, affirmative action, and ...