Until Bengal is Freed from Leftism, Swamiji and Netaji Will Not Be Reborn
"Until Bengal is Freed from Leftism, Swamiji and Netaji Will Not Be Reborn"
Introduction:
Bengal — once the cradle of India’s nationalist movement — gave birth to towering figures like Swami Vivekananda, Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose, and Aurobindo Ghosh. But post-independence, the very soul of this land was infiltrated by ideologies that stood in stark contrast to its proud spiritual and nationalist legacy. It’s crucial to understand how, after the fall of the Muslim League, the Left filled the vacuum and gradually turned Bengal into a stronghold of anti-national thought.
1. The Fall of the Muslim League and the Rise of Leftism
After India’s independence in 1947, the Muslim League lost its political relevance in India with the formation of Pakistan. But the ideological space it left behind was swiftly occupied by the communists.
By 1948, the Communist Party of India (CPI) had launched armed uprisings in Hyderabad, Telangana, and Bengal. One of the most violent expressions of this ideology emerged through the Naxalbari movement in 1967, which romanticized armed rebellion and class warfare.
2. Leftist Rule in Bengal: The Dark Age (1977–2011)
In 1977, the CPI(M)-led Left Front came to power in West Bengal, ruling uninterrupted for 34 years. What followed was a tragic era marked by industrial collapse, political violence, intellectual suppression, and youth radicalization.
- 1984: The Left government refused to honor Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose’s birth anniversary with any state-level program.
- 1990s: Industrial houses like Tata and Birla began exiting the state due to political hostility and labor unrest.
- 2006–2007: The Singur and Nandigram movements exposed how the Left crushed dissent and displaced farmers in the name of progress — ironically, the very people they claimed to represent.
3. Poisoning the Culture: The Capture of Education and Intellect
The Left didn’t just rule politically — it infiltrated Bengal’s intellectual and cultural fabric:
- School textbooks were rewritten to downplay or remove the contributions of Swami Vivekananda, Sri Ramakrishna, and Netaji.
- Nationalism was portrayed as outdated and oppressive, while violent revolution and class struggle were glorified.
4. The Need for Nationalist Renaissance
To reclaim Bengal’s lost soul, it is essential to defeat Leftism not just electorally, but ideologically. Only when Swami Vivekananda’s call — “Arise, awake, and stop not till the goal is reached” — echoes once again in classrooms, and when Netaji’s fierce cry — “Give me blood, and I shall give you freedom” — inspires the youth, can Bengal begin its true renaissance.
Conclusion:
Reviving the spirit of Swamiji and Netaji means purging Bengal of Leftist ideology — not just from politics but from minds and hearts. This is not a political battle. This is a battle for Bengal’s very soul.
The time is now — for a new awakening.
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