Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

A paradox who defied categorisa­tion

- Prashant Jha prashant.jha1@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s relationsh­ip with the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS) — it was both of convergenc­e and difference­s —and his commitment to the Hindutva ideologica­l framework (he was committed to the worldview, yet often went beyond it) has often generated curiosity.

Vajpayee’s aggressive speech in Assam’s Nellie in the early 1980s; his December 5, 1992 address in Lucknow on the eve of the Babri mosque demolition; and his Goa speech after the 2002 Gujarat riots have been cited to suggest that, at the core, the former PM shared the Sangh’s conception of the Hindu character of India. He was also, and this element has not been remarked upon enough, rather embedded in upper-caste networks and was unable to make the BJP a more inclusive party, in terms of giving representa­tion to backward classes and Dalits.

But Vajpayee’s public display of unease at BJP’s turn towards more militant Hindutva politics and the Babri mosque demolition; his open and inclusive persona; his commitment to Parliament; his willingnes­s to shed contentiou­s issues and find common ground with allies and respect the opposition; desire to take strong action after the 2002 riots; focus on economic reforms leading to individual freedom; and perpetual quest, despite repeated setbacks, to improve ties with Pakistan have been cited to suggest that he was actually a man who had moved far beyond the confines of a particular ideology.

So was he a liberal who respected individual choice and democratic institutio­ns and understood the need for messy compromise­s, or was he a conservati­ve who believed that the state’s fundamenta­l character must reflect the preference­s of Hindu society and group identities were central in politics?

He was probably both. Maybe even a pragmatist as some have suggested. But what is true is that he defied easy ideologica­l categorisa­tion.

What does this duality mean in structural terms?

For one, it shows that Indian politics rewards flexibilit­y. Critics will see it as hypocrisy. But only those leaders, especially from the BJP, who have been able to speak to multiple audiences have succeeded in a diverse polity. Narendra Modi, in fact, is another example of a leader who has straddled distinct images of being a Hindu leader, a man epitomisin­g developmen­t, and increasing­ly, a garibon ka neta,a messiah of the poor. Those who get stuck in a particular image, much like LK Advani did, often fail. Vajpayee was conscious of this and it helped him break out of the opposition, which is where he spent all but eight years of his political career.

The second takeaway is how the Sangh is more pragmatic in its approach than it is given credit for. It may not have been comfortabl­e with parts of Vajpayee’s political messaging. But it also recognised that Vajpayee was among its most important, successful and loyal products; a man who was rooted in the Sangh but had grown beyond it in appeal; who may not always do what some Sangh leaders would like but would never act against them actively either; a man who was their best bet in uniting ‘Hindu society’ and using state power to that end. Most Sarsanghch­alaks recognised this and allowed him leeway. It was only K S Sudarshan — RSS chief during his PM-ship — who tried to block Vajpayee’s operationa­l space. Vajpayee fought back. But the warm tributes that have come his way from the Sangh, and the deep respect he continues to command within the outfit’s rank and file, is a testament that they see him as their own. He too saw himself as anchored in the Sangh.

Finally, it is revealing how far Indian politics has travelled. Vajpayee benefited from BJP’s aggressive politics but maintained a degree of distance from it, which helped enhance his respectabi­lity among others — both regional parties as well as liberal opinion-makers. He led the party to a victory but because it did not have a majority, he kept key ideologica­l issues on the back burner. If it had, perhaps he may have pushed the envelope on some of them. Much like today’s BJP has.

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