Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Journalist LK Advani was advised to switch dhoti for trousers

- Smriti Kak Ramachandr­an n letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Former deputy prime minister LK Advani was given sartorial advice of switching from wearing the traditiona­l Indian style dhoti-kurta, considered the attire of choice by politician­s, to trousers and shirts in his stint as a journalist.

The disclosure comes in the 70th anniversar­y edition of the Organiser, an RSS publicatio­n, which reproduced a chapter from Advani’s autobiogra­phy. He had worked as a film critic and later took on an editorial position there.

“My work in the Organiser necessitat­ed a change in my sartorial appearance. Ever since I started working as an RSS pracharak in Rajasthan I had stopped wearing trousers and shirt and instead switched over to the Indian-style dhoti and kurta,” recalls Advani, who joined the Organiser as an assistant editor in 1960.

Observatio­n by his colleagues that the dhoti-kurta was the dress of a neta (political leader) and does not suit a journalist nudged Advani to go in for a makeover.

“I have never believed that western attire is a sign of modernity. I have always felt more comfortabl­e, in body and mind, wearing a dhoti-kurta. At the same time, I was never dogmatic about these matters. I saw merit in the advice given by my colleagues and started wearing trousers once again,” he writes.

Advani joined the RSS in 1942 and was assigned fulltime work in Rajasthan; soon after he joined the Jana Sangh, the precursor to the BJP and shifted base to Delhi in 1957.

Changes at the Organiser were not limited to attire alone. Advani recalls that to make the publicatio­n less serious as the journal was “too dry and only wrote about political issues”, it was decided to introduce a column on films. “I volunteere­d and began writing a regular column under the pen name Netra (eye).”

Advani also recalls how the magazine articulate­d the party’s concern s during the 1962 Chinese aggression. He writes about the concerns over then PM Jawaharlal Nehru “trying to befriend China as part of his grandiose vision of internatio­nalism” and this concern was shared with the deputy prime minister and home minister Sardar Patel.

 ?? n ?? BJP leader LK Advani pays floral tribute to Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose on his 121st birth anniversar­y in New Delhi on Tuesday.
n BJP leader LK Advani pays floral tribute to Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose on his 121st birth anniversar­y in New Delhi on Tuesday.

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