In Raebareli on Sunday, Swami Avimukteshwaranand delivered a powerful message redefining political loyalty for Hindus: solidarity in suffering trumps party lines.
Gathering supporters, the Swami exposed unfulfilled promises on cow sanctity. ‘The country overwhelmingly desires cows as mothers and slaughter banned as crime,’ he stated. ‘Vote-bank governments, including the present, vowed protection laws but deliver misery instead. Beef exports boom, outpacing past eras.’
Cow lovers across India demand action after decades of inaction. ’78 years gone; no more delays,’ he insisted. Governments, he accused, resort to intimidation: ‘Threaten, bribe, file cases – do anything to hush us.’
But suppression won’t work, he warned. ‘This voice embodies national heritage and majority will, not individuals.’ On politics, he cut through: ‘Power makes parties ruling or opposition. For Hindus? Allies stand in our agony; culprits and bystanders oppose us.’
Turning to BJP’s self-proclaimed Hindu identity, Swami questioned their absence. ‘No grief over choti removals, Batuk assaults, or insults to Sanatan symbols reveals true colors. Verbal Hinduism crumbles under real Hindu persecution.’
His speech galvanizes a movement, pressing leaders to align deeds with rhetoric amid persistent cow slaughter debates and cultural preservation battles.