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ABVP-SLVD Panel 🚩 | Voices of Change in HCU Elections 2025 | Exposing 5 Years of Campus Issues & Promises for a Better Future ✍️✨ #ABVP #HCU #Elections2025 #ABVP #SLVDPanel #HCU #UniversityOfHyderabad #CampusElections #StudentElections #HCUelections #VoteForChange #ABVPForStudents #StudentUnity #YouthVoice #HCUCampus #StudentPower #CampusPolitics #Election2025 #ABVPVoice #ChangeBeginsHere #YouthForChange #HCULife #StudentRights #ABVPPanel #HCUUpdates #University #YouthMovement #ABVPForHCU #StudentStruggle #HCUCampusVoice #ABVPStrong #HCUStudentUnion #StudentIssues #CampusDevelopment #StudentFuture #ABVPYouth #HCUPanel #ABVPUnited #HCUPower #CampusYouth #HCUABVP #CampusFuture #ABVPCampaign #StudentsFirst #HCUElectionsUpdate #VoiceOfYouth #ABVPChange #HCULeadership #CampusHope #HCUFuture #ABVPForChange #ABVPYouthPower #ABVPHCU #StudentDreams #HCUProblems #CampusHopeful #StudentLeadership #ABVPMovement #ABVPUnity #StudentStrength #HCUProblemsToSolutions #ABVPUpdates #HCUElectionVictory #ABVPYouth2025 #ABVPPanel2025 #VoteForChange2025 Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) is a large, pan-India student organisation, formally registered in 1949. It grew out of activities linked to the Sangh (Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, RSS) and has for decades been one of India’s most influential student groups — active on campuses, in national student campaigns, and as a feeder for mainstream politics. Origins and early decades (late-1940s → 1960s) Roots (late-1940s). The ABVP traces its roots to student activities connected with the nationalist, Sangh-family ecosystem in the years after independence; a national student forum was formalized and registered on 9 July 1949 as the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad. The organisation lists its first convention (1948 at Ambala) and early office-bearers on its site. Key early organisers. While several Sangh-affiliated leaders are credited with initiating the student work, historians and the ABVP’s own materials point to figures such as Balraj Madhok (early RSS/Jan Sangh activist) and, crucially, Yashwantrao Kelkar (who organized ABVP activities from the late 1950s and is often described as its principal organizer or “architect”). Purpose then. In its early phase ABVP positioned itself against leftist/communist influence on campuses and sought to build a nationalist student voice; it organised student activities, debates and local agitation around student and national issues. Growth, activism and national role (1970s → 1990s) 1970s — activism and the Emergency period. The 1970s saw ABVP take part in the era’s agitations (for example anti-corruption and other student movements). Like many student bodies, ABVP’s activism grew during and after the Emergency period (1975–77), and the post-Emergency environment contributed to expansion of many student groups. 1980s–1990s — political alignment and the rise of Hindutva politics. As the Sangh Parivar’s political and social campaigns (including the Ram Janmabhoomi movement) intensified, ABVP’s visibility on campuses rose. Scholars and journalists note ABVP’s close operational linkages with Sangh-family objectives and that many student leaders moved from ABVP into parties and organisations in the Sangh orbit. Structure, membership and ideology Organisation & claims. ABVP is nationally organised with state and campus units; its own materials present it as a student organisation that works on educational and cultural issues. The organisation claims very large membership and wide campus presence (figures cited in public sources sometimes quote millions of members — note such numbers are organisational claims and may be presented differently by different observers). Relationship to RSS / ideological orientation. ABVP is widely described by scholars and media as part of the Sangh Parivar (the family of RSS-affiliated organisations). The ABVP itself stresses student identity, but independent analysts and academic studies treat ABVP as the student arm of the broader Sangh network and situate its outlook within the Hindutva-influenced nationalist politics of that network. (This is one of the most important and well-documented aspects of ABVP’s identity.) Notable campaigns, influence and “career ladder” role Campus campaigns and national politics. ABVP has long campaigned on “nationalist” causes on campus (opposing what it views as anti-national or leftist activities), fought student elections against Left and Congress-aligned student bodies, and organised issue-based drives (education policy, campus discipline, cultural events). Feeder to mainstream politics. Over the decades, many leaders who were active in ABVP later became prominent in national or state politics, especially in the BJP and related groups. Journalistic analyses note that ABVP has been a launchpad for numerous politicians and administrators. (That pattern — campus activism → party politics — is a major part of ABVP’s public significance.)