HomeNewsOpinion'Indigenous Peoples Day’ reflects colonial guilt, not India’s reality

'Indigenous Peoples Day’ reflects colonial guilt, not India’s reality

RSSFACTS: India rejects Western definitions of indigeneity, asserting all Indians as original inhabitants. Unlike colonial genocides abroad, India’s civilisational ethos promotes inclusivity, challenging global narratives on Indigenous Peoples’ Day

August 08, 2025 / 07:02 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
India celebration
In India, the Indigenous people are not perceived as different from other natives.

(RSSFACTS is a column that demystifies the functioning, organisational structure and ideology of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh.) 

‘International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples’ is observed every year on 9 August. In recent years, this occasion has led to a clash of narratives. The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and the Akhil Bharatiya Vanvasi Kalyan Ashram (ABVKA), an RSS-inspired organisation, have taken a firm stand that this day holds no relevance in the Indian context, as it is a purely colonial and Western construct. It is largely seen as a project rooted in colonial guilt, aimed at addressing the historical oppression of Indigenous peoples under the so-called 'white man's burden'. In the West, there is a clear and defined divide between Indigenous and non-Indigenous populations.

Story continues below Advertisement

In contrast, in India, the Indigenous people are not perceived as different from other natives. According to ABVKA, “We believe that everyone living in India is a mool niwasi (original inhabitant) of the country. No one came from outside.”

India has always been civilisationally inclusive, unlike the West, where the ‘White’ man carried out brutal genocides across Europe and the Americas. These campaigns were unprecedented in their brutality.