NVC

(redirected from National Volunteer Corps)
AcronymDefinition
NVCNonviolent Communication
NVCNational Visa Center
NVCNetwork Value Components Ltd. (Japan)
NVCNorman Virus Control (software)
NVCNapa Valley College (California)
NVCNorman Virus Control
NVCNew Veterans Charter (Canada)
NVCNerve Conduction Velocity
NVCNational Vocabulary Championship
NVCNational Volleyball Center (Rochester, MN)
NVCNational Volunteer Corps (UN)
NVCNew Venture Center (various organizations)
NVCNordvestconsult (Norway, Shipbuilder)
NVCNational Vice Commander (American Legion)
NVCNational Vice-Chief (Order of the Arrow, Boy Scouts of America)
NVCNational Vegetation Classification Levels
NVCNext-Hop-Router Virtual Channel
NVCNarrowband Video Codec
NVCNorth Visitors Center
References inperiodicals archive
Of course, this exercise was aided and abetted by a formidable party organization: Millions of members recruited through "missed calls" (when recipients call back, they reach a BJP recruiter); effective polling booth committees active well before elections, including hundreds of thousands of "panna pramukhs" (BJP workers, each in charge of cultivating voters on a single page of the electoral register); foot soldiers of the Hindu-supremacist RSS, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh or National Volunteer Corps, delegated from every shakha (cell) in a state to interact with sensitive constituencies; campaign squads persistently visiting voters' homes with leaflets and arguments; and a command structure that relayed instructions down the hierarchy with swift and unchallengeable authority.
A car used by the carol singers was also set on fire, allegedly by Right-wing Hindu activists who claimed the Christian priests were trying to convert them by offering them cash incentives.
The attackers reportedly belonged to Hindu Bajrang Dal, a militant group also aligned with the Manch.
All of these Hindu organisations are part of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), or National Volunteer Corps, a Right-wing volunteer organisation.
Armed revolution was the answer; he joined and later was appointed the Commander-in-Chief of the National Volunteer Corps declared open war against the British rulers of India.
The extremist group RSS (Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh or National Volunteer Corps) is believed to be the group responsible for the violence toward the Bhil people, and for the escalating unrest between Hindus, Christians and Muslims in the country.
Kupholly Sitaramayah Sudarshan, head of the national volunteer corps, known by its Hindi acronym RSS, advised President Avul Pakir Jainulabdeen Abdul Kalam not to address the Jan.