Call to think above caste, wealth and language, RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat said in Raipur

Tezzbuzz Desk- Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) Sarsanghchalak Mohan Bhagwat said in Raipur that no person should be judged on the basis of caste, wealth, language or region. He stressed that this country belongs to everyone and the feeling of accepting everyone as one’s own is true social harmony. Bhagwat also said that the well-being of the entire world is linked to the well-being of India, hence India’s path is the path of world welfare.

Addressing the Hindu conference organized in Sonpari village of Raipur district of Chhattisgarh, Sarsanghchalak described social unity, environmental protection and disciplined civic life as the need of the hour. He urged people to rise above differences and work together for the society and the nation.

Bhagwat said the first step towards social harmony is to eliminate feelings of discrimination and alienation. He clarified that it is not enough to just hear good things in meetings or sermons, but it is necessary to implement them in behavior and life.

In his address, he called upon the people to adopt five main things-

  1. social harmony
  2. preservation of family values
  3. use of indigenous products
  4. disciplined civic life
  5. responsibility towards environment

He said that the society will become strong only when every person makes these values ​​a part of his daily life. Bhagwat said that one should be friendly to all Hindus in the area where one lives. He said that we consider ourselves one, but the world differentiates on the basis of caste, language, region and sect. In such a situation, it is necessary that people of all categories on the basis of which discrimination is done, should be considered as our own.

He said, “People should not be judged on the basis of caste, wealth, language or region. Consider everyone as your own. All Indians are my own, the whole of India is my own.”

The Sangh chief laid special emphasis on the fact that temples, ponds, wells and cremation grounds—no matter who built them—should be open to Hindus. He described social work as a medium of unity, not conflict.

Bhagwat said there should not be any fight or violence on these issues and influential people of the society should ensure that public religious and social places are accessible to all.

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