Photo:SNS

By Statesman News Service

ollowing the conclusion of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) All India Executive Committee meeting, Sangh workers have become fully active at the grassroots level.

To ensure the success of upcoming programmes, volunteers have fanned out into rural areas. In this connection, on Saturday, Sangh workers spent the night in Muslim-majority villages and the surrounding areas of the Govardhan block, calling upon the Hindu community to unite.

According to the Sangh’s plan, workers stayed overnight in Devseras village of the Govardhan block. During this time, meetings were held with members of the Hindu community and prominent citizens of the village. The main objective of this visit was to finalise the plans for the upcoming ‘Hindu Awareness March’ on January 12 and the ‘Hindu Conference’ to be held on January 22, and to increase public outreach.

The workers interacted with the villagers, making them aware of their cultural heritage and the importance of unity. The volunteers appealed to the people of the Hindu community to participate in the Hindu Conference in large numbers.

Govardhan block Karyavah (organiser) Bhanu Parashar said here on Sunday that on January 12, a message of unity and awareness will be spread in society through the Hindu Awareness March.

The Hindu conference will be held on January 22 in Devseras village, where thousands of people from the area are expected to gather. Parashar appealed to everyone to participate in the Hindu conference. The RSS is organising Hindu conferences in villages across the region; one conference will be held in one location each day.

This overnight stay by volunteers in villages located amidst Muslim-majority areas is considered strategically important.

After the RSS All India Executive Committee meeting, it is clear that the Sangh now wants to further strengthen its hold at the rural level. Local citizens also showed enthusiasm in the meetings and assured their full cooperation in the upcoming programmes.

This story was originally published in thestatesman.com.