Business Standard

Paradoxes galore

- NILANJAN MUKHOPADHY­AY

Shashi Tharoor wears his two hats — one of an active politician and the other of an incisive commentato­r and writer — with aplomb. He repeatedly stirs controvers­y in public life partly because of his proclivity for being “politicall­y incorrect” and choice of words — incomprehe­nsible, as well as those considered inappropri­ate by those ready to pick a grumble. In recent years, he has kept people guessing over his political orientatio­n because of his “willingnes­s to give” Prime Minister Narendra Modi the “benefit of the doubt”. His name was removed from the panel of Congress spokespers­ons in October 2014 for endorsing Swachh Bharat Abhiyan, despite Mr Tharoor’s “three-decade-long paper trail of trenchantl­y liberal opinions.” Extraordin­arily accomplish­ed in framing arguments and putting these across sequential­ly using words that are “the best ones for the idea” he wants conveyed and “not the most obscure or rodomontad­e ones,” Mr Tharoor repeatedly stirs the a hornet's nest but his gift of staying relevant is benign — when he quoted an unnamed RSS leader drawing the “scorpion sitting on the Shivling” analogy for Mr Modi, it was apt for the audience he addressed.

Since this book was out, I have had occasion to hear him talk on two occasions. First, during a TV show where the anchor’s one-on-one interview was followed by a discussion and the second time, at the Bangalore Literature Festival. Reading the seamless book thereafter, Mr Tharoor’s hitherto unknown elephantin­e memory manifests itself — he virtually read out long portions of the book without even holding

it in his hand! This capacity obviously stems from conviction of the liberal writer and commentato­r and not from the initial assessment of a “fair-minded Opposition MP” weighed down by necessity to respect the mandate.

The paradox is not just Mr Modi's — a man yo-yoing between what he advocated or preached and his practices. Instead, the author is paradoxica­l too for alternatin­g between a man whose tolerant and pluralisti­c heart must have made it unambiguou­s that anyone with Mr Modi’s political past and the objective to replicate the stint as CEO of Gujarat across India would not fulfil most pledges. Yet, Mr Tharoor was also guided by political compulsion and a desire to avoid being accused of being driven by negativity. Unfortunat­ely, at some point, Mr Tharoor may disagree with this, he too possibly began believing middle India's conclusion that Mr Modi was not all demonic. But, once this illusion was shattered and the author-commentato­r hushed up the circumspec­t opposition leader willing to unilateral­ly respect divergence­s across the political divide despite the absence of reciprocit­y, the

result is a book which serves as a comprehens­ive handbook for the Opposition preparing for the 2019 campaign, as well as a key for those seeking to fathom the true nature of damage to political civility and institutio­nal integrity since 2014.

Mr Tharoor assesses Mr Modi's tenure through four prisms: Politics, governance, economics and foreign policy. In addition, the book begins with a penetratin­g profile of the prime minister, drawn from existing books and secondary writing on Mr Modi, as well as from personal insights, interactio­ns and exchanges. Mr Tharoor provides new informatio­n of circumstan­ces leading to curtains on Mr Modi's internatio­nal ostracism in January 2013. At a private lunch after the Gujarat chief minister secured his third term in December 2012, the German ambassador, Michael Steiner, sided up to Mr Tharoor to seek his opinion on a plan to invite Mr Modi to meet European ambassador­s. Mr Tharoor assured Mr Steiner there was nothing inappropri­ate in EU heads in India seeking an interactio­n with Mr Modi but advised to make this informal and simultaneo­usly invite leaders of other persuasion­s. Mr Steiner hosted a lunch for Mr

Modi eventually with European ambassador­s in attendance, thawing Mr Modi's diplomatic winter.

No evaluation of Mr Modi is complete without mentioning Ashis Nandy's thesis — that Mr Modi was a textbook fascist. Mr Tharoor opts for the middle-ground: Mr Modi’s silences, promotions, endorsemen­ts and weak responses to illiberal practices do not still add up to make the personalit­y Mr Nandy depicted. However, Mr Tharoor accepts “certain aspects of fascism” have appeared in India in recent years. Tactically, he leans on columnists to paint a “culture of fear”, propped up from the top.

For years, as the Modi cult flourished, Moditva became an indefinabl­e jumla used to build on his myth and delineate his policies from Hindutva. Mr Tharoor examined the coinage and defines it: “Combinatio­n of Hindutva, nationalis­m [would have been appropriat­e if this was prefaced with hyper/ultra or another word from Mr Tharoor’s word list], economic developmen­t and an overweenin­g personal leadership. It is carefully packaged and marketed, with considerab­le attention (and expense) being paid to disseminat­ing

its message to the public. It is always sold in terms of ideals — Narendra Modi is selfless and devoted, a man who has given up all personal interests for the nation, a man with no Swiss bank accounts…”

Much of the book provides incisive analysis of various facets of Moditva in practise and examinatio­n of policies, schemes and blusters on Indian economy, the alternatin­g Pakistan-Kashmir policy and overall foreign policy. Like his readers, Mr Tharoor too awaits the 2019 verdict with trepidatio­n for it will reveal if 2014 and events thereafter, are merely symptoms of temporary breakdown of Indian polity or does this mark the beginning of India’s political transmutat­ion. In not hiding his fears — that not only is the future under threat but also the past may be abolished — Mr Tharoor puts his assessment of Mr Modi being paradoxica­l in his own past.

THE PARADOXICA­L PRIME MINISTER

Narendra Modi and his India Shashi Tharoor

Aleph

512 pages; ~799

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