Millennium Post

THE NATION WILL NEVER FORGET HIM

Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s life and works stand out as lessons for the nation

- UJJWAL K CHOWDHURY

Much is being said about the former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, and rightly so. Today is a day to remember the great son of India. Ten things most striking things stand out glowingly as lessons from his life and work for the nation.

First and foremost, Vajpayee was a gentleman politician, and a poet politician. As several channels show clips of his speeches in Parliament, both as the Prime Minister and as the Leader of the Opposition, we can see, yet again, that whenever he stood to speak in the Parliament, no one disturbed and people listened to him with rapt attention, enjoying the way he would blend poetry with politics seamlessly. As Prime Minister, Nehru respected young Vajpayee as a leader in the Opposition and sent him to represent India in the UN General Assembly. Vajpayee respected the right to dissent and disagree, as a part of polemics, and yet engaged with the dissenter, within and beyond his own party, which is so important in current times.

Second, that Vajpayee is a loved and admired leader is proven by the fact that he was continuous­ly a Parliament­arian from 1957 to 2009. He was elected ten times to Lok Sabha. He believed in the seriousnes­s of a lawmaker’s job, proposed training for newly inducted legislator­s, and proposed a national agenda for governance including the role of Parliament­arians. The purposeful­ness of Parliament was writ large in his works whether in the Opposition or in power.

Third, Vajpayee surely was a value-oriented leader. He lost his first government of 13 days in 1996 for lack of numbers in Lok Sabha, and also his next government in 13 months, in 1998, again for lack of support of just one more MP. But he did not compromise on ethics. Contrast this with the times today. He was an optimist and upheld that if your politics is right, people will back you up. Vajpayee advocated and practised positive nationalis­m. He embodied the best of Indian ethos and culture

His writings, ‘Andhiara fir hatega, ek naya savera ayega' and poem, ‘Geet Naya Gata Hoon’, bear testimony to his spirit to withstand adversity and accept the same to win another day. People rewarded him with a full majority in 1999 and he ruled as the first non-congress PM to have finished a complete term.

Fourth, Vajpayee was thoroughly a nationalis­t and one who advocated and practised positive nationalis­m. He proudly took Hindi to the UN for the first time and spoke in Hindi in the General Assembly. He represente­d the best of Indian ethos and culture.

Fifth, this nationalis­m of Vajpayee made him perhaps the only Right Wing leader of India ever who represente­d the Ganga-jamuni culture of India to the hilt, and is loved by Hindus and Muslims alike in Lucknow. He was elected with record margin as MP from

Lucknow which has a large percentage of Muslim votes. Vajpayee bitterly criticised the failure of Raj Dharma during Gujarat riots, which was an indictment of the government of the day in the state. His philosophy of being a Hindu, so aptly described in his poem, ‘Hindu tan man, Hindu jeevan', stands in sharp contrast to the aggressive no-holds-barred version of Hindutva today.

Sixth, Vajpayee was the man who ushered in an infrastruc­tural revolution in India. His model of developmen­t was inclusive, for the common man on the street. He initiated the Delhi Metro rail as a mass transit system and encouraged Sheila Dixit of Congress to take it forward. He brought in National Highway Developmen­t Project leading to East West North South Corridor or the Golden Quadrilate­ral and put his confidante B C Khanduri to lead the project

to success which has surely revolution­ised road transport in India. He envisaged and executed the first round of Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana which connected rural India greatly. The New Telecom Policy of 1999 brought in by him was also a crucial part of Indian telecom revolution.

Seventh, Vajpayee was the Messenger of Peace. Against many odds, he himself rode a bus to Lahore in 1999 for Indo-pak peace, along with many Indian celebritie­s. Sad that the Pak hawks got the better of the civilian government in Pakistan and did not allow it to go ahead and then Kargil war was imposed. But it is to the credit of Prime Minister Vajpayee that he did not allow India to cross the Line of Control during Kargil War to avoid being called the aggressor and due to the Pak Nuclear status. He, even in duress, gave peace a chance.

Eighth, Prime Minister Vajpayee gave a great push to science and technology. He conducted Nuclear Test in Pokhran 2 in 1998 and made the hero of this achievemen­t, Dr APJ Kalam as the next President of India, who was later named as the true People’s President. Vajpayee coined the slogan: Jai Jawan, Jai Kisan, Jai Vigyan. He promoted a scientific spirit, and not just technology.

Ninth, Vajpayee as a Prime Minister was against rule through ordinances, and while turning POTO into POTA (Prevention of Terrorism Ordinance/act), he took the entire belligeren­t Opposition into confidence through his now famous tea-party diplomacy. His was a perspectiv­e of reconcilia­tion with the Opposition, and respect and consensus for the allies (he ran a government of 24 parties and Akalis and Shiv Sena still call for that ‘Vajpayee touch’ in current dispensati­on).

Tenth, as a person and politician, he was not a hypocrite. The famous line of his, “I am a bachelor, but not a brahmachar­i”, says it all. When he disputed on a serious point of difference, he did not play Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. When the RSS ideologue Govindacha­rya called him ‘mukhouta’, he ensured that this view does not gain currency. Govindacha­rya is still in political wilderness.

So, here was a Right-wing leader (who was briefly into communism as a young adult during Quit India movement) who was truly the leader of a diverse India of many languages and religions, for whom reconcilia­tion and engagement were the key words of politics and who considered peaceful and mass-oriented transforma­tion as the only way to go ahead.

Rest in Peace, honourable former Prime Minister of India, Sri Atal Bihari Vajpayee. (The writer is a media academic. The views expressed are strictly

personal)

Vajpayee was a Right-wing leader (who was briefly into communism as a young adult during Quit India movement) and truly led a diverse India of many languages and religions, for whom reconcilia­tion and engagement were the key words of politics. He considered peaceful and mass-oriented transforma­tion as the only way to go ahead

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India