During a Hindu Sammelan organised to mark the centenary of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), far-right monk Yati Narsinghanand Giri asserted that he had studied Islam and its texts in mosques and madrasas, and alleged that its core objective is global conversion, describing institutions such as Darul Uloom Deoband as ideological centres of “Islamic jihad.” He identified Muslim demographic expansion as the “biggest threat,” warning that if Muslims reach 30 percent of the vote, “this country will no longer be yours,” and alleged that governments act under Muslim pressure, citing the CAA. He claimed “love jihad” had become “thousands of times more dangerous” after Triple Talaq and accused Muslim organisations of systematically targeting Hindu women. He warned that if Muslims gained political power within a decade, the Ram Mandir would be destroyed first, and asserted that India was moving toward becoming an Islamic State rather than a Hindu Rashtra, contrary to leaders’ promises. He criticised the new UGC Bill as discriminatory toward Hindus, warned that rising Muslim population growth would “show you your place,” and called for the “total destruction of jihadis,” demanding protection for Sanatan Dharma and vowing to continue the fight against what he described as Islamic “filth.”