Ideas

Arun Shourie: An Intellectual Yodha Or A Hit-Man?

  • Arun Shourie, once seen as an intellectual Yodha, has descended into the realm of an intellectual hit-man. Or perhaps he has always been a hit-man, merely posturing as a Yodha.

Aravindan NeelakandanDec 18, 2024, 12:41 PM | Updated Dec 27, 2024, 09:09 PM IST
Arun Shourie

Arun Shourie


Arun Shourie, the acclaimed writer and intellectual, is poised to release a new book on Veer Savarkar. Judging by the pre-publication publicity, it seems clear this work intends to tarnish Savarkar's image, portraying him in a decidedly negative light. 



But wait, the discerning reader might interject. Wasn't Arun Shourie a steadfast supporter of the Hindu movement for an extended period?

During the Ayodhya movement, weren't his lectures a resounding wave across the nation? Did he not author books that critically examined the predatory conversion tactics of missionaries?


Did he not produce a comprehensive and penetrating book on the realm of Fatwas? Did he not contribute to the seminal compilation by Sita Ram Goel, ‘Hindu Temples: What Happened to Them?’ ?


Following the demolition on December 6, 1992, did he not pen a remarkable article for the volume ‘The Ayodhya Reference’ (1995), published by Sita Ram Goel’s ‘Voice of India’?



Yes, he did all that. He started aligning with the Hindu movement slowly and tentatively with his articles in the Illustrated Weekly of India when the BJP held merely two seats in the Lok Sabha and any semblance of it being in substantial numbers in the Parliament was lightyears away.

Progressively, he embraced the Hindu cause more and more boldly, remaining steadfast for decades. His contributions are irrefutable, marking a lifelong commitment.

However, it is important to acknowledge that his journey has witnessed a recent estrangement from the movement. While his past allegiance and contributions remain significant, the present situation reflects a shift in his stance. 

Arun Shourie's trajectory exposes a fundamental challenge within the Hindu political landscape: the engagement with intellectual supporters of the cause.

Foremost there should be a distinction between an intellectual Yodha and an intellectual hit-man. These are not rigid classifications, for a Yodha may transition into a hit-man, and conversely, a hit-man may ascend to the status of a Yodha.


Sita Ram Goel stands as an exemplar of the Dharmic Yodha, a warrior of the intellect who dedicated his life to the pursuit and defence of Dharma.

With unwavering resolve, he embarked on a mission to rectify historical narratives and illuminate the depths of civilizational history, forever transforming how generations of Hindus perceive their heritage.

Goel's journey was marked by both triumphs and tribulations. Despite experiencing profound disappointments with institutions, he once held in high regard, he remained steadfast in his commitment to core Dharma. His intellectual odyssey, a transition from the confines of communism to the expansive embrace of the Hindu Dharma, serves as a testament to his intellectual integrity and unwavering pursuit of truth.

 Arun Shourie is far more academically qualified, far more accomplished in worldly realm of power and popularity than Sita Ram Goel. But he is not an intellectual Yodha. He is an intellectual hit-man. If his demands are not met he would simply move to the other side with all bitterness and destructive zeal. 

So to understand the intellectual hit-man phenomenon called Arun Shourie the book one has to start is a book most Hindutvaites may not want to remember. It was one of his earliest books: ‘Hinduism: Essence and Consequence’.


The book, published in 1979, is a sophisticated critique of Hinduism, blaming it for many of India's problems. The criticism, largely from a Marxist perspective, suggests that Hindu spiritual traditions were designed to exploit people. It argues that the philosophical discourse of Hinduism was a cunning creation to extract wealth from the masses for the priestly class and rulers.


It is important to note that Shourie emerges as an intellectual precursor to the more vehemently anti-Hindu ideologue, Kancha Illaiah. Illaiah extrapolates Shourie's implicit assertions of producers and parasites, mapping them onto Bahujans and Brahmins respectively in a manner reminiscent of how 'Der Stürmer' characterised Jews.

Shourie's writings do not deter such extrapolations; rather, his depiction of Hindu spirituality as a cunningly crafted device for exploitation lends support to Illaiah's views.

But Shourie changed.

Was it genuine or was his antennae so powerful that he understood how the political winds of India had started blowing with the nascent Ayodhya movement starting? Or was it some personal situation and power frustration with his erstwhile leftist PUCL friends? Or sincere change of heart?

It is hard to say.

For such a momentous transformation, there appears to be no article in which Shourie has articulated cerebral journey or the internal alchemy through which this change happened. Considering the deep-seated animosity he displayed towards Hinduism in his book, documentation of his journey in detail, akin to the reflective accounts penned by Sita Ram Goel, would have immensely benefitted his readers.


However, it's important to differentiate Shourie from Subramanian Swamy, who also aligned with the Hindu movement during Modi's rise but opposed the Ayodhya movement when it happened. Swamy even suggested using the military to take over the Sri Ram Janmabhumi site and hand it over to the Muslims.

In contrast, Shourie remained a steadfast supporter of the Ayodhya movement throughout its duration, standing resolutely with the cause.

Perhaps this transformation can be attributed to a singular influence: Sita Ram Goel.

Drawing from Goel's source materials, Shourie authored ‘The Only Fatherland,’ a scathing critique of the Communists' role during the freedom struggle. Goel's influence is also evident in Shourie's book on missionaries, which Kushwant Singh famously compared to Romans throwing Christians to lions. Shourie openly acknowledged that his book on Fatwas had significant inputs from Arif Muhammad Khan.

In 1997 Shourie published another book that was totally out of sync with the general spirit of the Hindu movement but in the post-Mandal era of caste-polarisation it played to the gallery of ‘upper-castes’.

The book was on Dr. Ambedkar. Provocatively titled ‘Worshiping False Gods’, the book attacks Dr. Ambedkar mostly as pro-British and a self-serving person. The book should have been actually a warning to Hindu side. It showed the tendency of Arun Shourie to mutilate facts and disregard the contexts with the sole object of vilifying a person.



Shourie recounts how the British viewed Ambedkar favourably and how Ambedkar was not entirely supportive of an independent India, claiming Ambedkar's hardships were exaggerated. He laments that these facts have been erased, culminating in Ambedkar receiving the Bharat Ratna.


Shourie's main argument is that Dr. Ambedkar was after power and position. He claims that Ambedkar became frustrated when the Secretary of State for India and the Viceroy delayed his appointment.  He writes:

This perspective suggests that Dr. Ambedkar used the cause of Scheduled Communities to gain power, driven by a desire for authority and frustration when it wasn't achieved.


Contrary to Shourie's implication that Ambedkar sought power, Ambedkar was already a member of the prestigious Defence Advisory Committee. He advocated for the representation of the 'Depressed Classes,' and Veer Savarkar proposed his name. The contrast between these factual presentations and Shourie's rhetorical distortions is stark.

When Shourie aims to malign someone, he disregards truth and context, sensationalizing and magnifying his narrative with rhetorical flair. This trait should have been a warning to Hindutvaites, yet they chose to overlook it and promote Shourie.


Shourie's book, ‘Eminent Historians: Their Technology, Their Line, Their Fraud’ (1998), cemented his status as a cult figure among Hindutvaites. This work masterfully combined facts and rhetoric, recharacterizing Hindu traditions he once deemed exploitative as an ‘inclusive religion’ and ‘the pluralist spiritual search of our people and land.’

He now viewed the portrayal of Hinduism as ‘intolerant, narrow-minded, and obscurantist’ as a ‘diabolic inversion.’ To this day, the book remains a valuable resource for understanding the actions of the Marxist cabal when in power.


If Shourie's infiltration into the Hindutva political ecosystem was largely facilitated by Atal Bihari Vajpayee his initial stamp of approval was because of his anchoring in the work of Sita Ram Goel.  That is despite Sita Ram Goel's visceral hatred for Vajpayee, whom he unjustly and in bad taste called a ‘Nehruvian windbag.’




No Hindu temples, no civilizational discourse—it was Vajpayee that kept him in the BJP. Now, he finds Sonia Gandhi the most humane of Indian politicians. He labeled the BJP a “kati patang” (runaway kite), borrowing from a Bollywood movie title, and metaphorically quoted Mao Zedong about bombarding the BJP headquarters. Yet, in 2013, he returned to campaign for Modi within the elite intellectual circles he knew well and thought he was doing a great service to Modi and the BJP.



This attempt failed. Despite his absence from social media, he claimed BJP supporters abused his disabled son online. While social media abuse is common, no respectful Hindutva handles targeted his son. Many still respect Shourie, believing Modi might have wronged him.


Arun Shourie, once seen as an intellectual Yodha, has descended into the realm of an intellectual hit-man. Or perhaps he has always been a hit-man, merely posturing as a Yodha. Yet, Shourie serves as a caution and prayer for every intellectual - whatever his or her ideological persuasion: "Do not lead me to the Shourie fall."

Join our WhatsApp channel - no spam, only sharp analysis