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Home»National News»Sangh and its enduring battle against Macaulayism: With his appeal, PM Modi revisits an old RSS concern
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Sangh and its enduring battle against Macaulayism: With his appeal, PM Modi revisits an old RSS concern

editorialBy editorialNovember 20, 2025No Comments7 Mins Read
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Sangh and its enduring battle against Macaulayism: With his appeal, PM Modi revisits an old RSS concern
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Delivering the Sixth Ramnath Goenka Lecture in Delhi on Monday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi called on people to take a pledge to end, over the next 10 years, Thomas Macaulay’s influence, which he said had “colonised” Indian minds for almost two centuries. The PM’s statements expressed a core concern of the Sangh and were in line with its position on indigenising education and “decolonising the Indian mind”.

Macaulay’s objective, Modi said, was to create Indians who “are Indians by appearance but British at heart.” The country, he added, “paid a heavy price” for this as the belief that the Western or foreign was superior took deep root. “The feeling of pride in what was ours gradually diminished. We started looking toward foreign countries for innovation. This mentality led to a trend in society where imported ideas, imported goods, and imported services were considered superior,” the PM said.

With this, the PM brought to the fore a concern that the Sangh Parivar has repeatedly raised since the days of the second sarsanghchalak M S Golwalkar who wrote In Bunch of Thoughts, “The imperialist designs of Macaulay, the brain behind the system of English education, were trumpeted aloud, ‘We must at present do our best to form a class of interpreters between us and millions whom we govern — a class of persons Indian in blood and colour, but English in taste, in opinions, in morals and in intellect’.”

Last month, RSS sarsanghchalak Mohan Bhagwat said in Mumbai, “We were educated in the Macaulay knowledge system … We are Indians, but our minds and intellect became foreign. We must completely free ourselves from that foreign influence. Only then will we be able to access our knowledge system.”

In the 1970s, in addition to Macaulay’s influence, a new concern began bothering the Sangh: the sway Marxists held in academia, especially in social science institutions. It started when Aligarh historian Nurul Hasan became the Education Minister after Indira Gandhi allied with the CPI following the split in the Congress in 1969. With Marxist scholars often critical of what they saw as “ancient myths” and calling for a “scientific approach” towards deconstructing them, the next decades would see the Sangh Parivar adding “Marxist distortions” to its concerns about “Macaulayist distortions”. That Marxism is also “Western thought” made the alignment complete. However, with Western categories providing the frames of reference in much of global academia, replacing them is easier said than done.

The Vajpayee years

Things picked up when the Atal Bihari Vajpayee government came to power and Murli Manohar Joshi became Minister of Human Resource Development in 1998. Joshi commissioned new NCERT history textbooks, tried to reform school curricula to “nationalise and spiritualise” education, and sought to increase the essentials of Indian culture in curricula from 10% to 25%. His term also saw much controversy on the inclusion of “value education” and the proposal to teach “Vedic astrology” in universities.

Critics in the Opposition and academia labelled these moves as “saffronisation” of education. “Instead of saying that India has a very glorious past, will they teach Marx’s views?” Joshi responded in an interview to The Organiser, a Sangh-affiliated publication, after the Congress-led UPA government came to power in 2004.