Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Lalji Tandon, a people’s man who loved Lucknow

- Sunita Aron letters@hindustant­imes.com

nLUCKNOW:ABOUT a month ago, Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath called on an ailing Lalji Tandon, the governor of Madhya Pradesh. Lying on a hospital bed in Lucknow, Tandon discussed developmen­t projects for the impoverish­ed Bundelkhan­d region that stretches across the two heartland states.

“I am in Raj Bhawan and can push some projects,” Tandon told Adityanath.

That was not to be. The 85-year-old veteran Bharatiya Janata Party leader died early Tuesday morning after spending weeks in hospital for breathing problems, fever and kidney complicati­ons.

He is survived by his wife and three sons.

His life and four-decadelong political career ended in the city he lived in and loved.

In Lucknow, thousands knew him personally and he knew them by their first names. He was known for his love of local delicacies, his culinary prowess and his revival of the Lucknow Holi procession, where Muslims and Hindus participat­ed with equal vigour, underlinin­g the unique Ganga-jamuni syncretism of the city.

He forayed into electoral politics in 1971 after being elected corporator from old Lucknow. A two-time member of the Legislativ­e Council, the state Upper House, and threetime member of the legislativ­e assembly, Tandon grew used to comfortabl­y winning elections from the Muslim-dominated Lucknow West assembly constituen­cy.

At the height of the Ram temple movement in the 90s that propelled the BJP to power in Uttar Pradesh, many crucial meetings were held at Tandon’s Mall Avenue residence, which also became the nerve centre for talks between the BJP and the Bahujan

Samaj Party (BSP) ahead of the short-lived coalition government in 1997.

In 2002, when the BJP and the BSP came together to form a coalition government, Tandon became BSP chief Mayawati’s “rakhi” brother.

The relationsh­ip between the two parties soured later, but he laughed away any criticism directed at him.

His personal moment of pride came in 2009 when he inherited mentor and former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s Lok Sabha seat of Lucknow. An emotional Tandon

described himself as Atal’s “khadau” (slippers). By then, he had served as cabinet minister in UP thrice, holding the power, urban developmen­t, housing, and finance portfolios, among others. He would go on to win the Lok Sabha elections by over 40,000 votes.ahead of the 2014 Lok Sabha polls, Tandon handed over Vajpayee’s constituen­cy to defence minister Rajnath Singh. His son Ashutosh Tandon became a cabinet minister in 2017 and holds the urban developmen­t portfolio.

In August 2018, Tandon became the governor of Bihar, before moving on to Madhya Pradesh in July 2019.

In Lucknow, innumerabl­e tales circulate about his close relationsh­ip with Vajpayee, with whom he shared a passion for Lucknow’s unique culture and cuisine. Their ties were summed up by state cabinet minister Surya Pratap Shahi at the launch of Tandon’s book in May 2018: “I remember how difficult it was to meet Atalji without Tandon’s nod,” Shahi said.

He was of the opinion that secularism ran in the blood of Lucknowite­s. .

When asked why he hadn’t written a book on Lucknow cuisine, Tandon once said,

“No chef or cook can give informatio­n on Lucknow cuisine or spices as I can -- the real taste of Awadh. Do you know there are 1,000 types of sweets, 20 kinds of ‘laddoos’, ‘rabri’ and ‘malai’?” The book, Ankaha Lucknow, which talked about the history, architectu­re and cuisine of the city, was launched by vice president Venkaiah Naidu in May 2018.

“This book tells the real story of Lucknow. It may create some controvers­ies too. But history can’t be distorted; truth cannot be hidden,” Tandon had told this author. That was Lalji Tandon, a people’s man who didn’t hesitate to call a spade a spade.

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Lalji Tandon n

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