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April
16, 2002
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End
of the road for secular saffron
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Slow turn
in Gujarat
Would
you not lose your mental balance were you to discover you got it
all wrong? Gandhian socialism of early-eighties vintage
was what did in Atal Bihari Vajpayee last time round. Now it is
the NDA agenda. Imagine waiting in the wings since the Quit India
movement only to put your own programme on the back-burner merely
to get the opportunity to step centrestage! The whole idea of secular
saffron is such an oxymoron that only a moron could think
it could last. Hence, from Goa on, it is gone-gone-gone.
The
current Vajpayee dispensation may be but two and a half years old
but the Vajpayee trick is now four years old. The trick was for
the leader of the saffron brigade to wear the mukhauta, so that
behind him could sneak in the stormers of the citadel. Jai Shri
Ram! The Sangh Parivar has simply wearied of waiting for Vajpayees
feint to deliver. Especially as Narendra Modi has shown the alternative
to the Vajpayee road. A contemporary quotes a top BJP leader
in Ahmedabad as saying, People in Gujarat are now going
to vote on a purely Hindu-Muslim basis. (Purely?)
We
have been here before. It was the driving out of millions of Hindu
refugees from East Pakistan to West Bengal in 1949-50 which led
Nehrus minister of industry, Shyama Prasad Mookerjee, to resign
from the Central government. He launched his Jan Sangh in October
1951, on the eve of the first general election, in the full conviction
that as this was to be the first ever election in India on the basis
of universal suffrage in an 85 per cent Hindu country, in a country
moreover still traumatised by the horrors of Partition, the people
would vote on a purely Hindu-Muslim basis. In the event,
the Jan Sangh got two seats and would never have come to
power if V.P. Singh had not opened the doors to state governments
for the BJP through his wholly unprincipled alliance with them in
the assembly elections of February-March 1990.
The
misperception was not Mookerjees alone. The misperception
was so widely shared in the Congress that Congress Parliamentary
Party sullenness over the Nehru-Liaquat pact of April 1950 led to
Nehru tendering his resignation; to the election of Purushottam
Das Tandon over Acharya Kriplani in the AICC session at Nasik in
September 1950; and the stand-off between President Rajendra Prasad
and the Nehru cabinet over what Nehru insisted would be the wholly
un-secular act of the head of state of the secular Indian Union
associating himself in any way with the inauguration of a temple,
particularly the rebuilding of a temple at Somnath conceived as
a retribution on history. Rajendra Prasad went but only as
a private individual.
Nehru
prevailed because he stood his ground on principle. That principle
was stated at a Gandhi Jayanti meeting in the Ram Lila grounds at
Delhi at the beginning of the very month in which the Jan Sangh
was born. Nehru said and it is the ultimate creed for secular
fundamentalists like myself: If any man raises his hand against
another in the name of religion, I shall fight him till the last
breath of my life, whether I am in government or outside.
Not only were the communal forces walloped at the hustings, secularism
was so deeply ingrained into our body politic that the saffron challenge
rose again only after three and a half decades in the mid-eighties.
Yet,
just as there were those in the Congress in the early fifties who
believed there was a soft Hindu alternative to the Hindutva of Golwalkar
and gang, so are there secularists in the country in our times
in the Congress and outside who think the answer to the saffron
challenge lies not in hard secularism but in a soft Hindu alternative.
Prominent among the non-Congress elements who till yesterday thought
this a viable alternative are the now twitchy NDA partners, the
chambers of commerce and industry (who spotted the BJP as a soft
touch), the Americans (who were delighted at Jaswant Singhs
fawning) and editorialists desperate for an alternative any
alternative to the Congress.
Goa
has sounded the wake-up call. We are back to where we were on the
eve of the first general election. Is it to be secularism or Hindutva?
It cannot be both as even the NDA partners are now learning.
Gujarat will be the litmus test. Was the assault on the Sabarmati
Ashram a law and order problem, or the storming of the Bastille
of secularism? Is Gandhi still alive in the state of his birth?
For if he is, then secularism is still alive in the country of his
birth. If Gujarat goes the Modi way, secularism country-wide is
in danger. But if Gujarat rejects Modi, the rejection will be as
comprehensive and long-lasting as Nehrus defeat
of communalism in 1952.
Nehru
won because he did not flinch. He refused adamantly
to let considerations of votebank politics sway his resolve. Indeed,
his intention, at the time he tendered his resignation in April
1950, was to spend the rest of his life on the East Bengal-West
Bengal border bringing comfort and succour to the victims of a hate
politics which then bore the name of Jinnah and now bears the name
of Modi. Gandhi too, had he not been shot by the editor of a journal
called Hindu Rashtra the life goal of Advani-Vajpayee-Modi-Shourie
also intended to spend the rest of his days tending to the
victims of Hindu communalism in Pakistan, thus bringing Pakistan
back to the path of secularism.
It
is for us secularist politicians to remember that there is a life
for secularists beyond politics. Winning or losing in Gujarat is
not the issue. Keeping aloft the banner of secularism, whether
I am in government or outside, as Nehru put it, is what secularism
in politics is all about.
But
I am convinced that in our India it is impossible for a secularist
to be out of office for any period longer than an aberration. This
country is secular because it is secular, not because someone has
asked it to be. Bar a fringe of fanatics, the people of this country
want to live in peace and harmony with each other. It is only faint-hearts
who have lost their faith and parivarists who have lost their mental
balance who could possibly imagine that after all it has gone through
since February 27, Gujarat will vote saffron. Provided the alternative
is articulated, provided there is no compromise of pure, unadulterated
secularism, provided no non-Sanghi attempts to present a paler shade
of saffron, provided the principled politics of Jawaharlal Nehru
prevails, I am willing to bet my life on it that the forces of communalism
will be crushed in the forthcoming election in Gandhis Gujarat.
And I know I am putting my life on the line in saying so.
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