A screenshot of the video showing Hindu Mahasabha leader shooting at the effigy of Mahatma Gandhi in Aligarh. | Barkha Dutt/Twitter

 

Agencies / Aligarh

Even as India celebrated the 71st death anniversary of the father of nation Mahatma Gandhi, a right-wing group shockingly re-enacted his assassination in Uttar Pradesh’s Aligarh Wednesday.

The Hindu Mahasabha — of which the assassin, Nathuram Godse, was once a member — also garlanded his statue and distributed sweets to hail what they claimed was a watershed moment in Indian history.

A video that has gone viral on social shows Hindu Mahasabha national secretary Puja Shakun Pandey shoot the effigy of Mahatma Gandhi amid cheers. She later told reporters that her organisation has started a new tradition by recreating the assassination, and it will now be practised in a manner similar to the immolation of demon king Ravana on Dussehra.

The Hindu Mahasabha regards the day of Mahatma Gandhi’s death as Shaurya Divas (Bravery Day), in honour of Nathuram Godse. The right-wing activist was one of the early members of the organisation, founded by Madan Mohan Malaviya way back in 1915.

Nathuram Godse was sentenced to death on November 8, 1949. Mahatma Gandhi’s sons Manilal and Ramdas pleaded that his punishment be commuted, but the Jawaharlal Nehru-led government refused to relent. He was hanged at Ambala Jail on November 15 the same year.

This is not the first time the Hindu Mahasabha has tried to glorify Nathuram Godse while trying to denigrate the celebrated freedom fighter. In 2015, outfit leader Swami Pranavananda had announced plans to install statues of Nathuram Godse across six districts of Karnataka. He also described the assassin as a “patriot” who had worked with the blessings of Hindu nationalist Vinayak Damodar Savarkar.

All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen chief Asaduddin Owaisi had earlier termed Mahatma Gandhi’s assassination as independent India’s “first terror attack” at the hands of a religious extremist. He also squarely blamed the incident on Savarkar, a right-wing personality who is said to have inspired Hindutva-based politics in the country.