RSS's Silent Shield in India’s Twilight Hour of Partition
The Partition of India was a civilisational wound. In those dark days, there emerged a disciplined, organized, and selfless force that stood firm during the chaos, to strengthen the shattered remains of Bharat’s people.
True freedom is never tested on the day it is declared, it is tested in the days when survival itself hangs by a thread
August 15, 1947, came with the tricolour soaring in Delhi’s fresh breeze, but in Punjab and Bengal, that same wind carried the stench of blood and smoke. While India celebrated the end of centuries of colonial rule, millions of Hindus and Sikhs were fleeing their ancestral homes, facing the fury of mobs, dishonour of women, and the uncertainty of refugee camps.
Dr Hedgewar participating in the 1930 satyagraha against the British
The Partition of India was a civilisational wound. In those dark days, there emerged a disciplined, organized, and selfless force that stood firm during the chaos, to strengthen the shattered remains of Bharat’s people. That disciplined force was none other than the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS).
Directing individual potential for the struggle Pre-Independence
The Sangh’s service during Partition was not born out of sudden necessity. Its founder, Dr. Keshav Baliram Hedgewar, had envisioned from the very inception in 1925 that Bharat’s freedom would be meaningless without a united and fearless society. Hedgewar himself had deep roots in the freedom movement. He had infact resigned temporarily from the position of Sarsanghachalak in 1930 to join the Dandi March, anticipating the imprisonment of the participants and thus responsibly also deciding the fate of RSS's aim 'Rashtra Nirman'. In Yavatmal, he led Satyagraha, faced nine months of hard labour, and returned to his post with the conviction that political freedom and societal unity were inseparable.
Even when the British branded the Sangh “communal” and barred government employees and teachers of the Central Province from joining, the RSS did not retreat. Hedgewar’s foresight for the nation and RSS was that political movements may win independence, but only an awakened and disciplined society can sustain it, something the Sangh upholds even today.
Standing in the Flames of 1942
When the Quit India Movement of 1942 erupted, RSS cadres in Vidarbha, where the Sangh was born, joined hands with Congress leaders. Many were jailed, some, like young swayamsevak Balaji Raipurkar, even gave their lives. Across Bharat, swayamsevaks sheltered revolutionaries like Aruna Asaf Ali and Nana Patil, hoisted the tricolour under fire, and drew the attention of British intelligence, which described them as “anti-British volunteers ready to sacrifice their lives.” (Source: Vayuveg)
The same discipline and courage that defied the British became a lifeline in 1947.
Partition & RSS's spectrum stretching from 'Seva' to Civilisational Defence
When independence arrived wrapped in the horror of Partition, RSS moved into action without waiting for any official orders, because the goal for the organization was clear, may it be for a Pracharak or a swayamsevak. In Punjab’s burning villages and Bengal’s crowded camps, swayamsevaks organised protection squads, guarded refugee convoys, rescued abducted women, carried the wounded, and stood watch over temples and neighbourhoods under threat.
The Bastuhara Sahayata Samiti and other relief committees became lifelines for displaced families. Food, shelter, medicine, whatever was needed, was delivered with the same discipline that had been drilled into shakhas for decades. Government machinery was paralysed, yet swayamsevaks were on the ground, filling the vacuum as “the biggest organised force apart from security forces.”
The Sangh believed that Swaraj was not just about raising the flag. It was also about protecting the civilisation that the flag represented. And thus the organization was functioning accordingly.
Strategic Intervention: The Kashmir Question
The Sangh’s role during Partition was not limited to the humanitarian work. M.S. Golwalkar, who had taken charge after Hedgewar’s passing, travelled tirelessly to boost the morale aof swayamsevaks across nation and had also warned of the dangers. In October 1947, as Pakistan’s designs on Kashmir unfolded, Golwalkar met Maharaja Hari Singh in Srinagar. The private meeting led to the Maharaja’s accession to India—a political intervention that proved vital to the territorial integrity of the nation.
Golwalkar rejected the label “refugee” for those fleeing East and West Pakistan, asking, “How can one be a refugee in his own home?” His vision turned relief work into a statement of national unity: This nation belongs to everyone.
RSS's Civilisational Message of Seva and Unity
The jail cells of Akola, the blood-soaked roads of Punjab are all witness to the fact that RSS’s contribution in those years was never merely of a socio-cultural group, or just a political ally in the freedom movement. It was, and remains, a civilisational force.
Partition Horrors Remembrance Day is not only a time to mourn those we lost; it is also a moment to acknowledge or in Sangh's case at least accept those who stood guard over Bharat when she was bleeding. The RSS preserved honour, guarded life, and defended the soul of a nation in its most fragile moment.
And perhaps that is why, even if history books choose silence, the memory of swayamsevaks patrolling the night, escorting terrified families, and holding the tricolour high will always remain etched in the living memory of Bharat. For in that hour, they proved that freedom is not won only once but it is defended every day thereafter.
Himali Nalawade is associated with News Bharati as an Author since a considerable period. She is mostly linked with researched articles from the areas of Defence, Defence Infrastructure and Culture-Religion. Along with her Masters in Mass Communication and Journalism after her graduation in History, she has also studied Diploma in Underwater Archaeology and Diploma in Indology.