
Reacting to media reports that the ABHM is keen on providing legal assistance to the Malegaon blast accused, Kaushik denied such claims as "false and baseless projections of our ideologies.
"We do not support terrorism by anyone on this land, rather we are keen to prepare the youth for protecting our borders," said Kaushik.
Denying its hard-line stand against minority communities, ABHM national youth secretary Umesh Tyagi claimed his organisation is actively involved in promoting inter-caste and inter-religious marriages.
"We will take legal action against anyone who claims to be collecting funds in our name for assisting the Malegaon blast accused," said Tyagi.
The ABHM had 17 MPs in the parliament during 1952, later in 1962 it created space for Jan Sangh and allowed it to flourish as a political party under the RSS.
"That was a historical mistake as the RSS befooled us when we said we want to divert our attention to social service and entrust politics with them. Over the years they have removed from the base ideologies and betrayed us," said Kaushik.
The organisation, which states its motto is to 'Hinduise' politics and militise Hindus (rajniti ka hindukaran aur hinduo ka sainikaran), wants to get back into the mainstream through participation in assembly and Parliament elections now.
Eminent leaders like Lala Lajpat Rai and current Lok Sabha speaker Somnath Chatterjee's father, N C Chatterjee were associated with the ABHM as office bearers.