Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

On BJP’s radar: Kerala and Bengal

The party is furthering its presence in these states by building on local antagonism­s

- RAJDEEP SARDESAI Rajdeep Sardesai is a senior journalist and an author The views expressed are personal

When a few days ago, Delhi BJP leader Nupur Sharma tweeted pictures of the 2002 Gujarat riots and attempted to pass them off as Bengal 2017, she was only being a loyal party soldier. In the BJP’s disinforma­tion campaign, Bengal is now, to borrow a hashtag from one of the rabble-rousing channels, a ‘Hindu hate hub’. The graphic imagery of burning shops and vehicles and sword-wielding Islamists is only designed to further the communal divide and consolidat­e a potential Hindu vote-bank.

It isn’t just Bengal. The Sangh parivar’s propaganda blitz claims that the RSS is a ‘victim’ in Kerala too. While a return to power of the Left Front government in Kerala last year has resulted in increased and condemnabl­e violence against RSS workers in Kannur district in particular, the blood-letting has a long and gory history that dates back to the 1960s. Nor have the killings been one-sided: Official figures given by then Kerala home minister Ramesh Chennithal­a in 2015 suggest both RSS and Left cadre have been victims.

That Bengal and Kerala feature so prominentl­y in the BJP’s political narrative should come as no surprise. These are the only two large states left in the country (states with more than 10 Lok Sabha seats) where the BJP is still a marginal political party. A third state Tamil Nadu also has a limited BJP presence but in keeping with the state’s unique political ethos, the BJP is looking to ‘outsource’ its leadership to Rajinikant­h, the reigning superstar of Tamil cinema. In two other relatively ‘weak’ states – Odisha and Andhra Pradesh – the BJP has artfully used local alliances, past and present, to expand its base.

Bengal and Kerala have certain similariti­es that make these states conducive for the lotus to bloom (the BJP doubled its vote share in both states in the 2016 assembly elections). Both states have large minority population­s, ideal for the BJP to create a sense of ‘victimhood’ and position the party as a saviour of the majority community. In both states, the ruling parties have faced the charge of minority appeasemen­t, making it easier for the BJP to make inroads. In both states, the Congress is facing a steady erosion of its vote base while the rapid decline of the Left in Bengal has expanded the Opposition space considerab­ly.

The nature of political Islam has changed in both states too. The syncretic Sufiist traditions in Bengal have been replaced by a more puritanica­l and radicalise­d version with Wahhabist influences from across the border in Bangladesh now finding increasing reso- nance in parts of the state.

A similar process has been witnessed in the Muslim-dominated districts of Kerala with money from West Asia being poured into local mosques and madrasas.

The rise of the BJP in these two states only exposes the failure of the self-styled secular class to offer a credible challenge to communal politics. A Mamata Banerjee, for example, maybe Bengal’s unquestion­ed neta number one, but her political insecuriti­es have made her vulnerable enough to pursue a rather short-sighted agenda where she has wooed the local imams and muezzins with the sole intent of cementing a large 27%-plus Muslim vote-bank. In Kerala too, the Congress and Left have competed to cultivate more extreme Muslim and Christian group leadership­s to consolidat­e their hold over power.

That the politics of so-called appeasemen­t has principall­y benefitted only a ‘creamy layer’ among the minorities reveals the hollowness of secular politics. In Bengal, for example, per capita incomes of the average Muslim remain well below the national average, statistics which suggest that acute problems of social and economic backwardne­ss have scarcely been addressed. In Kerala, education has helped build a more egalitaria­n society but without necessaril­y creating more employable opportunit­ies.

By building on local antagonism­s, the BJP is playing with fire. Rather than provide a healing touch, the party seems keen to polarise communitie­s further. Expecting the BJP to pull back from Hindutva is improbable; seeking a course correction from the ‘secular’ leadership remains a last hope.

Post-script: Nupur Sharma is not the first BJP leader to put out ‘mistaken’ riot pictures. During the 2013 Muzaffarna­gar riots, BJP MLA Sangeet Som allegedly circulated images from Afghanista­n’s conflict to incite violence. Far from being reprimande­d, he is now a senior minister in the Uttar Pradesh government.

 ?? HT ?? BJP president Amit Shah at an election rally, Kolkata (File Photo)
HT BJP president Amit Shah at an election rally, Kolkata (File Photo)
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