Despite exoneration, Narendra Modi cannot play national role

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By Amulya Ganguli

Narendra Modi’s career provides a classic example of how a kinky ideology can thwart political ambitions in a pluralistic society. Yet, when the same ideological outlook enabled him to scale the heights of political power by winning the 2002 assembly elections in Gujarat, the chief minister must have presumed that even greater successes were in store for him.

What he hadn’t taken into account were the imperatives of a multicultural country. Till the 2002 elections, Modi was operating within the parameters of the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) world view based on the concept of cultural nationalism or one nation, one people, one culture.

The obvious similarity of this slogan with Nazi Germany’s ein volk, ein Reich, ein Fuehrer (one people, one nation, one leader) underlines the fascistic basis of the idea. But neither Modi nor the BJP was bothered. They believed they were on a roll at the time.

However, it was the jolt of the defeat in the 2004 parliamentary polls, which woke them up to the realities of Indian broadmindedness.

Moreover, Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s belief that the 2002 Gujarat riots were responsible for the BJP’s defeat two years later might have also induced both Modi and his party to mull over their past policies.

Hence, the chief minister’s new emphasis on development for all the people of Gujarat. There was no more mocking of the minorities by him as when he crassly described the camps of riot victims as child-producing factories or took care to pronounce the then chief election commissioner’s full name of James Michael Lyngdoh to stress his Christianity, which, according to V.D. Savarkar, is a religion alien to India, like Islam.

But none of it has helped Modi, the man who was described by Ashis Nandy as a “textbook case of a fascist and a prospective killer, perhaps even a future mass murderer”. The social commentator was prescient, for the last phrase was used by journalists for the chief minister after the riots.

Indeed, this is the charge he still faces and even after his latest exoneration by the Supreme Court-appointed Special Investigating Team (SIT) – the Nanavati commission had earlier given Modi a clean chit in its interim report – the public perception about his complicity continues.

Because of this belief, even the SIT’s report has aroused disbelief with a prominent Muslim resident of Gujarat, J.S. Bandukwala, calling it “compromised”.

Of course, no final word has yet been said about Modi’s role. Even the SIT report was only about the mob violence in the Gulberg housing society where the former Congress MP, Ehsan Jafri, was killed. The report will now be considered by the trial court while the views of the amicus curiae, Raju Ramachandran, are yet to be made public.

However, the point is not the prolonged legal battles, but the fact that Modi’s strenuous attempts from the post-2004 poll results to put the riots behind him haven’t cleansed his image.

It has been said that one of the reasons why the outbreak, which he callously described as “stray incidents” although 1,200 people were killed, continues to haunt him is that he has never expressed remorse, as Manmohan Singh has done about the 1984 anti-Sikh riots.

However, even if he does say sorry at some point, it may not make much of an impact for two reasons: one is that the BJP itself remains committed to its “one culture” ideal for India, which emphasises the country’s Hindu character to the exclusion of all minority cultures, as in a theocracy.

The other reason is that Modi represents, perhaps because of his grim visage, the type of person who can be expected to implement this sectarian vision. This is the reason why he is a hero to large sections of the saffron brotherhood and is persona non grata to liberals and also groups and individuals in the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA), who are aware that elections cannot be won without accommodating the minorities.

Modi, then, is fighting a losing battle. Moreover, he has fallen between two stools. He can no longer resurrect his minority-baiting self which he flaunted from the time of the anti-Christian disturbances in Gujarat’s Dangs area, where the present terror suspect, Assemananda, was an activist, to the 2004 elections.

And he must have realized by now that all his ‘sadbhavna’ fasts in aid of social harmony, and all his success in providing bijli, sadak and pani (electricity, roads and water) to the voters, which help other politicians, will not enable him to play a national role, which he apparently intends to do.

The riots, for which the Gujarat high court has castigated the state government, and the demolition of the Babri mosque 10 years earlier, were the fallout of the Hindutva camp’s virulent communal propaganda. While the 1992 act of destruction helped the BJP to attain power at the centre, the 2002 outbreak made the party lose it. Evidently, the square peg of communalism cannot fit into the round hole of a secular democracy. (IANS)

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Posted by on April 14, 2012. Filed under National. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry
  • Sanjay

    Amulya Ganguli tries to falsely import the label of Nazism to libel those he disagrees with. He seems to forget that Nazism, also known as National Socialism, is a Left-wing ideology. Nazi is short for NazionaleSocialisteArbeiterPartie (National Socialist Workers Party), which should be an obvious indicator of its origins. Besides Hitler, the worst mass-murderers in history were his fellow socialists, Stalin and Mao. This is to the lasting shame of the Left of course, which is why they so fanatically attempt to deflect the blame for their acts onto their critics, who typically aren’t from the Left.

    It’s laughable to pretend that the BJP is the party of Ein Volk, Ein Reich, Ein Fuhrer, when it’s the Congress Party which is the originator of Personality Cult politics in the country — that’s why Nehru is known as the ‘Great Banyan Tree’, because he and his partymen would snuff out any challengers to his de facto One Party State, a political philosophy which continues to this day.

    Amulya Ganguli attemps to use his poison pen to assert nonsense that doesn’t stand up to the light of scrutiny. This type of trashy character-assassination journalism doesn’t help his credibility.

  • Reco2

    Sanjay

    “He seems to forget that Nazism, also known as National Socialism, is a Left-wing ideology. ”

    The Truth:

    “And that party is either the Left: and then God help us! for it will lead us to complete destruction – to Bolshevism, or else it is a party of the Right which at the last, when the people is in utter despair, when it has lost all its spirit and has no longer any faith in anything, is determined for its part ruthlessly to seize the reins of power – that is the beginning of resistance of which I spoke a few minutes ago. ”

    -Adolf Hitler: Speech of April 12, 1921

    Hitler said he was Rightwing and believed that the left would result in “Bolshevism”. It amuses me how Rightwing liars like yourself choose to disown Hitler based on the poor “argument by name” which would mean that the “Democratic People’s Republic of Korea” would be “democratic”.

    Thankfully, people who know history(which excludes you) classify National socialism as a pro capitalist and Right wing ideology.

    Amulya Ganguli was spot on.

    You should learn history!