Ram Swarup was born in 1920 to a banker father in
Sonipat, now a part of the state of
Haryana in the
Garg gotra of the merchant
Agrawal caste. He graduated with a degree in economics from
Delhi University in 1941. He started the Changer's Club in 1944, members of which included
Lakshmi Chand Jain,
Raj Krishna,
Girilal Jain and
Sita Ram Goel. In 1948–49, he worked for
Mahatma Gandhi's disciple
Mira Behn (Madeleine Slade). Swarup wrote a book on the Communist Party that was published under an assumed name. In 1949, he founded the Society for the Defence of Freedom in Asia. The Society published books, reviewed in the West, that criticised both the
Presidium of the Supreme Soviet-mouthpiece
Izvestia as well as
Pravda, another mouthpiece for that same foreign power's
Communist Party. The Society for the Defence of Freedom in Asia ceased operations in 1955. His early book
Gandhism and Communism from around this time had some influence among American policymakers and members of
Congress. Swarup also wrote for mainstream Indian weeklies and dailies, like the
Telegraph,
The Times of India,
Indian Express,
Observer of Business and Politics,
Hindustan Times and
Hinduism Today. In 1982, Swarup founded the publishing house
Voice of India, which has published works by Harsh Narain, A. K. Chatterjee,
K.S. Lal,
Koenraad Elst,
Rajendra Singh, Sant R.S. Nirala and
Shrikant Talageri, among others. == Views ==