The Asian Age

Nehru: Why the big fuss?

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Members of the Nehru- Gandhi family being kept out of the official committee to observe the 125th anniversar­y of the birth of India’s visionary first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru is no big deal. However, that is exactly what’s being sought to be made out by some elements on the grounds that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s antecedent­s are anti- Nehru, and he has made no bones about it.

As far as historical role goes, the idea of Jawaharlal cannot be erased, whatever the personal predilecti­ons of a PM, his party or his government. Official observance­s are, however, another matter.

The memory of Jawaharlal Nehru was not sought to be buried by another BJP PM, Atal Behari Vajpayee. Mr Modi would have looked churlish if he had gone that way, no matter what his own estimation of the first PM, who was not only Mahatma Gandhi’s chosen heir, in a manner of speaking, but also the foundation­al figure, both politicall­y and philosophi­cally, for the establishm­ent of a secular India after Gandhiji was gone.

There is no particular reason why Jawaharlal’s descendant­s should be accommodat­ed in an official committee to commemorat­e him even if they are leading lights of Indian politics, although suffering a decline at present. The government, after all, has not ignored the Congress Party in the national committee to commemorat­e Panditji’s birth anniversar­y, being chaired by the PM.

The BJP, or any leader of that party, including the present PM, cannot appropriat­e Nehru, as some think is happening. They wouldn’t be the BJP if they did.

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