The Asian Age

Why the Sangh needs to bank on Sardar’s legacy

- Nilanjan Mukhopadhy­ay M. F. U. Tandvi New Delhi

There are two sub- themes to the argument of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Bharatiya Janata Party while appropriat­ing Sardar Vallabhbha­i Patel’s legacy. First, despite being in the Congress for the entirety of his political life, the Iron Man remained a closest Hindu nationalis­t. Second, Jawaharlal Nehru and his inheritors, premeditat­edly undermined the Sardar’s memory because of being political pygmies and fearing his presence in the political discourse would hinder their project to eternalise the Congress. The BJP claims that Patel’s concealed political orientatio­n was the reason why the Congress conspired to push him out of the national memory.

A little examinatio­n of these contention­s are in order. The first charge that history books toned down Patel’s role is flimsy because this writer learnt through school history textbooks in the early 1970s that he was also known as the Iron Man. Patel’s role in securing the accession of the princely states was too significan­t in history to ignore. However, Congress government­s after Indira Gandhi, and particular­ly after Sonia Gandhi assumed the party presidency, became paranoid about perpetuati­ng the Sardar. Consequent­ly, hardly any new streets and, more important, government programmes were named after Sardar Patel.

The issue of Patel not being conferred the Bharat Ratna is cited as proof of his underminin­g. This, however, is a twosided argument. The existence of Nehru and Indira Gandhi on the awardees list much before Patel was honoured by the P. V. Narasimha Rao government in 1991 is cited as proof of Nehru’s and his inheritors’ belief in self- aggrandisa­tion. But then Nehru and later Congress government­s honoured leaders who had been out of step with them — Purushotta­m Das Tandon in 1961, K. Kamaraj in 1976 and Vinoba Bhave in 1983. It thereby cannot be said that Patel was not conferred the Bharat Ratna by design. Rather, this was an avoidable procedural error and oversight. Moreover, when the award was instituted in 1954, no procedural process of selecting awardees was drawn up. As a result, decisions were ad hoc and haphazard — most conspicuou­sly when Nehru was bestowed with the honour in July 1955 by President Rajendra Prasad, who unilateral­ly announced the award at a state banquet. Nehru was presented with a fait accompli, but he should have made amends by immediatel­y honouring the Sardar, especially when in 1956 no one was awarded the Bharat Ratna. Likewise, Indira Gandhi was awarded the honour after the 1971 war, and this too should have been soon followed with Patel being placed at par with other awardees. The Congress Party leadership is open to accusation­s of being self- centred, but no charge beyond this will stick.

This, however, does not in any way, justify the falsificat­ion of history and painting Sardar Patel as the wronged one. True, he stepped aside for Nehru for the Congress presidency not once, but thrice — in 1929, 1937 and 1946. However, this was at Mahatma Gandhi’s behest, and Patel was of the view that he was a mere soldier of the Mahatma and it was not for him to question Gandhi’s decisions and opinions. Subtly, Narendra Modi, the BJP and the entire Sangh Parivar has appropriat­ed Patel within their majoritari­an framework. For instance, at his Satute of Unity inaugural speech on Wednesday, Mr Modi, while taking a dig at Rahul Gandhi for his proclaimed shiv bhakti, also recalled Patel’s role in securing the Somnath temple ( part of Junagadh state) and ensuring access to Hyderabad’s Charminar. Selective representa­tion of incidents and ideas, besides his choice of words, often carry implicit messages and this is not the first time that Mr Modi has smartly reminded people of the Hindutva argument of India’s 1,200 years of slavery.

One must understand why this ruling establishm­ent has appropriat­ed the nationalis­t mainstream and its icons alongside elevating their own heroes. If Nehru, Indira and Rajiv Gandhi were most preferred when government programmes were named, under this government the honour goes to Deen Dayal Upadhyaya. The urgency to name schemes and change the names of famous places like Mughal Sarai has to be placed against the politics of renaming, and Hindutva discomfort with names reminding Indians of their Islamic heritage. The push to embrace national icons and claim they were ignored by Congress government­s because they stood at par, if not in challenge, with Nehru, points to the twin realities — the Sangh Parivar

The push to embrace national icons and claim they were ignored by Congress government­s, points to the twin realities — the Sangh Parivar is faced with paucity of icons who resonate with people is faced with paucity of icons who resonate with people. However hard the Sangh Parivar tries to remind people of V. D. Savarkar being a “veer”, he will be everlastin­gly recalled as the man who was tried for conspiring to assassinat­e Gandhiji. Despite acquittal, the J. K. Kapur Commission report raised unanswered questions regarding his role.

Patel’s appropriat­ion is a carefully conceived Sangh Parivar project and efforts were first made to project L. K. Advani as the Iron Man’s avatar. After his political eclipse, Mr Modi donned the role and the Statue of Unity was announced in 2010 to mark the beginning of the tenth year of him becoming Gujarat chief minister. It virtually launched his prime ministeria­l bid. When the project was announced, the UPA’s terminal decline had started and public sentiment had begun intensifyi­ng that India needed a decisive leader who while being Prime Minister would act at his own behest and not as per diktats of a largely inaccessib­le party president living in a cocoon with access to just a handful. It is not only Patel who has been appropriat­ed — days earlier a similar bid was made at another event at Delhi’s Red Fort, when an attempt was made to cast Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose in the Parivar’s framework. RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat too has revised the Sangh’s line on the freedom struggle, and in the past the fraternity has embraced many others who they opposed in their lifetime. This just underscore­s the shallownes­s of the Sangh Parivar’s political ancestry. It will remain to be seen if people continue to bank on an organisati­on and its leaders with a past at conflict or which stands in contradict­ion with its present.

The writer is the author of Narendra Modi: The Man, the Times and Sikhs: The Untold Agony of 1984 It is pleasing for every Indian that India jumped 23 ranks in the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business Index 2018 to 77, while it ranked 100 in 2017. India made an outstandin­g improvemen­t into moving from 100 to 77, which is a huge success of the government. It seems that India’s strong reform agenda to improve the business climate for small and medium enterprise­s is bringing fruitful results to the country. The government’s tireless efforts towards business improvemen­t will lead the country to a peak of success. THE SUPREME COURT has managed to pull the rug from under the feet of the NDA government by seeking pricing details of the 36 Rafale fighter jets India is procuring. It also favoured disclosure of informatio­n on the induction of an Indian offset partner. Coming close on the heels of the muddle in the CBI and the ugly spat between the finance ministry and the RBI, the developmen­t has pushed the government into a corner. The SC has also done well to firmly put down the objections raised by attorneyge­neral K. K. Venugopal. India will wait with bated breath for the government’s response.

N. J. Ravi Chander

Bengaluru

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