presenting Shri Nanesh Samata Puraskar to Shri Nanaji Deshmukh, in New Delhi on 8 April 2006. Deshmukh's family had always had been in close contact with
K. B. Hedgewar, the founder of the RSS and an activist for
Hindutva, a Hindu nationalist ideology. In 1940, after Hedgewar's death, Deshmukh joined the RSS. He was sent to
Uttar Pradesh as a
Pracharak. At
Agra, he met
Deendayal Upadhyaya, the leader of the BJS. Later, he had to stay in a
Dharmashala but had to keep on changing
Dharmashalas as no one was allowed to stay there for more than three days consecutively. Ultimately, he was given shelter by Baba Raghavdas, reportedly on condition that he would cook meals for him. Within three years, almost 250
Sangh Shakhas commenced in and around Gorakhpur. He established India's first
Vidya Bharati, the educational wing of the RSS, in
Gorakhpur in 1950. When in 1947, the RSS decided to launch two journals (
Rashtradharma and
Panchjanya) as well as a newspaper,
Swadesh, Deshmukh was given the role of the managing director. Following the
assassination of Mahatma Gandhi in 1948 by
Nathuram Godse, who has connections with the RSS, the organisation faced significant political backlash, culminating in a government-imposed ban. In response to this political crackdown, the organisation adopted a more covert approach to continue disseminating its ideological materials. Deshmukh emerged as a key figure during this period, playing a central role in orchestrating underground publication efforts. == Political life ==