Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

THE LEGEND OF SYAMA PRASAD

Tripura governor Tathagata Roy’s biography of Syama Prasad Mookerjee, founder of the Bharatiya Jana Sangh, the parent party of the Bharatiya Janata Party, shows that Mookerjee was a “constituti­onalist” and not a “confrontat­ionalist”

- Ranjona Banerji letters@htlive.com Ranjona Banerji is an independen­t journalist.

The legend of Syama Prasad Mookerjee is one of India’s most curious and contentiou­s. He was, without a doubt, a great intellect. And as an educationi­st – the vicechance­llor of Calcutta University at only 33 – he succeeded his illustriou­s father, Sir Asutosh Mookerjee and continued in the endeavour to keep education in Bengal at a high standard. He was also a politician who worked with ideologies that he opposed if only for the greater good. It is practicall­y forgotten that he was India’s first industry and supply minister in Jawaharlal Nehru’s Cabinet and laid the foundation for much of India’s industrial policy and our public sector corporatio­ns. It is true that he has not been given enough attention by historians in independen­t India. And the matter of his death in Kashmir at 52 remains a mystery. Indeed, even as he was the founder of the Bharatiya Jana Sangh, the parent party of the Bharatiya Janata Party, his own partymen have more or less forgotten him. The current prime minister Narendra Modi of the BJP even confused Mookerjee with Shyam Kishore Varma, a Gujarati freedom fighter and socialist, mentioning how Modi brought back his ashes from Geneva. And yet, across Bengal at least, irrespecti­ve of party ideology, it is common knowledge that Mookerjee died in Kashmir with much conspiracy theory chatter that his enmity with Nehru played a part.

Thus, this book by BJP member and Tripura governor Tathagata Roy is much anticipate­d. If the BJP does not celebrate – albeit several decades too late – one of its own, then Mookerjee’s legacy is doubly neglected. The origins of this biography are from two chapters by Prashanto Chatterji, former head of history at Bardhaman University, according to the Acknowledg­ements. Unfortunat­e health problems forced Chatterji to withdraw and Roy took over. The book was first published in 2012 by Popular Prakashan, when it did not get much traction and has now been republishe­d by Penguin. The result, sadly, is a mixed bag. The reader gets, more or less, a chronology of Mookerjee’s life. But there is so much back and forth and “more on that later” that it is easy to get confused. It is fascinatin­g to learn that Mookerjee was so close to Rabindrana­th Tagore and S Radhakrish­nan. We learn of the formation of the Hindu Mahasabha, the close associatio­n Mookerjee had with the Congress party, including MK Gandhi, Nehru and Vallabhbha­i Patel. Mookerjee’s relationsh­ip with Subhas Bose – the other hero of Bengal – is interestin­gly nuanced, where Mookerjee disagreed with Bose’s alliance with the Muslim League and his call to arms and yet he admired Bose as a great patriot. Mookerjee’s moving speeches are well known. To many he was the best counter to Nehru in Parliament, a fine and fitting foil to the prime minister’s eloquence.

Mookerjee’s deep love for Bengal is highlighte­d and his role in the Bengal famine, his fight with British officers are commendabl­e stories. His strong campaign during the Partition discussion­s to ensure that Bengal was partitione­d (and did not all go to Pakistan) was appreciate­d by many. Yet the underlying thread here was a seeming distrust of all Muslims.

Given all this, the biggest expectatio­n from this biography would be insights into Mookerjee’s mind. Is there a contradict­ion between his renaissanc­e achievemen­ts and his fine mind, and his view of India as a “Hindu-Muslim” country with few meeting points? We see a movement in time through the telling of the story but gain little discerning comprehens­ion. For instance, despite being head of the Hindu Mahasabha, Mookerjee worked closely with the Congress to which he once belonged. By the time he formed the Jana Sangh, he was clearly much closer to the RSS view of India than he had ever been before. How did this happen? Was it Jammu and Kashmir and Nehru’s pact with Liaquat Ali Khan of Pakistan and the subsequent neglect of the plight of Hindus in East Pakistan? Mookerjee was primarily it appears a Hindu and a Bengali though one is not clear in which order. I would not go so far as to call him “secular” because there was always a distance from Muslims. Yet there were individual friendship­s and political coalitions. The Muslim League was distrusted by many and that is not unique to Mookerjee, even if Roy would prefer it so. It would have been helpful to understand these apparent contradict­ions better.

The biggest problem in understand­ing Mookerjee’s mind comes from the biographer’s own prejudices. Several of his summarisat­ions, which include attacks on the Congress and Nehru, appear to come from Roy’s mind and not that of Mookerjee. There is also an inability to stay within the time zone. Roy often applies the politics of today to those of pre-Independen­t and newly Independen­t India. It makes for an annoying reading experience as it reveals the biographer’s pettiness of thought which is an injustice to his subject. It would behove the BJP of today to learn something from Mookerjee’s own ideas on compromise and coalitions! Throughout, the biographer appears furious with India’s Hindu voters for preferring the Congress to Mookerjee’s political parties, the Hindu Mahasabha and the Bharatiya Jana Sangh. It is not made clear how much of this rage comes from Mookerjee or Roy. One suspects they come from the latter. This does not help Mookerjee’s cause and perhaps diminishes him in the eyes of a non-RSS, non-BJP, non-Hindutva reader.

What is clear, however, is that the biggest disservice to Mookerjee has come from those within his own political ideology. What we see of the BJP today is not the sort of party that Mookerjee would have been part of, judging from this biography. Roy reiterates that Mookerjee was not a “confrontat­ionalist” and he that he was a “constituti­onalist”, both words the BJP today seems unaware of. Indeed, it would befit Mookerjee’s legacy better if his story is told by a non-partisan profession­al historian. He surely deserves better than this.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? ▪ Lord Layton (left) Leader of the Reuters Goodwill Mission chatting with Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, Sardar Patel (centre) and Syama Prasad Mookerjee (extreme right) at a tea party on 20 April, 1949.
HT PHOTO ▪ Lord Layton (left) Leader of the Reuters Goodwill Mission chatting with Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, Sardar Patel (centre) and Syama Prasad Mookerjee (extreme right) at a tea party on 20 April, 1949.
 ?? COURTESY PENGUIN ?? ▪ Tathagata Roy
COURTESY PENGUIN ▪ Tathagata Roy
 ??  ?? Syama Prasad Mookerjee: Life and Times Tathagata Roy 450pp,~599 Penguin
Syama Prasad Mookerjee: Life and Times Tathagata Roy 450pp,~599 Penguin

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