The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) concluded its annual Akhil Bharatiya Pratinidhi Sabha (ABPS) in Haryana's Samalkha, attended by nearly 1,500 delegates.
The ABPS is the most important annual organisational event of the Sangh, reviewing activities and deliberating on the organisation's direction for the year ahead.
The RSS is celebrating its centenary this year, focusing on organisational expansion and strengthening core activities through its current initiatives, known as Panch Parivartan or Five Transformations.
The Sangh now holds nearly 90,000 daily shakhas, with its activities reaching every corner of the country, according to RSS Sarkaryawah Dattatreya Hosabale.
When asked about the Sangh's view on India's perspective on the West Asia war, Hosabale replied that the Sangh has no role, stating that the Indian government is doing what is in the supreme interest of the nation.
The RSS leadership has expressed concerns over India's economic growth, low per capita income, wealth inequality, and sluggish growth, with former union minister Murli Manohar Joshi analysing the risks of artificial intelligence and India's energy security.
Joshi warned that India's sovereignty is at stake, highlighting the need to control technology to protect India's intellectual, political, and economic sovereignty.