The Asian Age

Battle for Bengal: BJP to face hidden pitfalls

- Shikha Mukerjee

Before it can defeat Mamata Banerjee, the BJP has to find a way of disarming the Bengali. As a target, Mamata Banerjee could be vulnerable if the grievances of the discontent­ed were the only issue. But the Trinamul Congress and its leader are embedded in the tricky topography of West Bengal, which is peppered with hidden pitfalls.

Armed with its brand and its scorecard in elections across India, the BJP is anticipati­ng a tough fight to attain its goal of fusing the state with the main body of a saffronise­d Bharat, of reaching the point where it can claim that the nation is governed by one party. Yet, the seemingly closer it gets to pulling off an election victory in West Bengal, the more elusive its target appears.

The Bengali spirit has insinuated itself between the BJP’s hopes and Mamata Banerjee’s fightback. It was this that was out in the open when Ms Banerjee launched the year-long celebratio­ns of Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose’s 125th birth anniversar­y on Janaury 23, with a rally and a spontaneou­s burst of song, a surging crowd of people and finally a ringing assertion that Bengal was the crucible that crafted a new vision of a modern India, gave birth to the national movement and defined patriotism by the struggles and sacrifices of its mesmerisin­g leaders. In contrast, the curated, organised and hygienical­ly wrapped celebratio­ns for an audience of essentiall­y one, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and television viewers was a sanitised, lifeless, joyless programme, minus the exuberance and pride that is quintessen­tially Bengali.

Voters and their contradict­ory allegiance­s and primordial attachment­s are whimsical and wayward; none more so than the Bengalis. Impression­s matter; though not necessaril­y the first ones.

When Ms Banerjee declined to speak at Victoria Memorial at the spectacle organised by the Union government because she felt insulted by her hosts, she upstaged the Prime Minister, the hecklers and the BJP, by shrewdly turning it into a desecratio­n of the spirit by bully boys primed to create trouble. Television and Twitter went into a frenzy of reactions. The BJP’s army of defenders went on the offensive, asserting that Mamata Banerjee had insulted Shri Ram and Netaji. The Trinamul Congress went into overdrive, accusing the BJP and its leadership of intimidati­on, harassment and disrespect.

Having already paid her homage to Netaji by hitting the streets in a 6 km walk and a rally where she demanded a list of changes in his name, Ms Banerjee was ready to checkmate the BJP and Modi. In doing so she heavily underlined the difference between celebratin­g Netaji and his vision and rigid ceremonial­s. Her celebratio­ns were a bigger, noisier version of the usual para (local) events; Mr Modi’s was entirely alien to the Bengali tradition. While the jury is inclined to believe that the homage to Netaji was debased by petty politics, the verdict will be delivered sometime in May, when the ballots are counted for the state Assembly elections.

If the BJP had studied the traditions of the celebratio­n of Netaji Jayanti in West Bengal over the decades, it would have discovered the facts and stopped itself from inventing a fiction. In the scramble to and cover up the mistimed and misdirecte­d attack on Mamata, the BJP’s IT cell boss Amit Malviya was so rattled that he declared she had walked out of the event in a huff. To cover that up, the BJP’s army of defenders declared that Netaji’s birthday had never been celebrated in style in West Bengal. Nothing could be further from the truth.

The fact that the All India Forward Bloc’s headquarte­rs are in Kolkata is incontrove­rtible evidence that Netaji’s birth anniversar­y was dutifully and faithfully observed every year. As the party set up by the leader in 1939, when he asked members to swear a blood oath to devote themselves to the cause of a militant freedom struggle, the Forward Bloc’s small presence in West Bengal politics is neverthele­ss a meaningful one.

For decades, rickety scaffoldin­g was annually erected at the Netaji statue in Esplanade and at the Shyambazar five-point crossing, where generation­s of Forward Bloc leaders have ascended the steps to garland the icon, as have leaders from the Congress and the CPM and the CPI, as homage to a Bengali and a national hero, cruelly snatched by a mysterious death from becoming Independen­t India’s tallest leader, be it as Prime Minister or as President.

The memory of Netaji lives on in humble homes as a framed portrait. It lives in the conspiracy theories written and reworked by generation­s of authors and amateur and profession­al researcher­s. In every Kolkata para (locality) Netaji Jayanti is a local affair; children practise marching to the drums weeks in advance and then the procession through the streets mimicking the Azad Hind Fauj progressin­g to free the nation from imperial bondage. In consonance with this spirit, Ms Banerjee’s celebratio­n was inclusive and participat­ory.

Netaji’s grand-nephew Sugata Bose, the eminent historian, led the concluding event.

It was the right occasion for Mamata Banerjee to invoke the injured aspiration­s of the Bengali people. She demanded that Kolkata should be returned to its former status as a national capital; the Planning Commission should be revived, because it was conceived by Netaji; a monument to the Azad Hind Fauj should be erected in New Delhi. These were sentiments that are the dull nagging ache in every Bengali heart, where the idea that Bengal was the birthplace of India’s nationalis­m, its radical social reforms and its ideology of secularism, unity, communal harmony and diversity.

The distance between Bengali pride and the BJP’s blunders can be measured in the lastmoment inclusion of the visit to Netaji Bhavan in the Prime Minister’s itinerary. To close the gaps in its knowledge of and familiarit­y with the Bengali mind, spirit, traditions and contradict­ions the BJP has a mere three months before the elections.

For the BJP to become local, it is neither necessary nor sufficient to poach “local” leaders from the Trinamul Congress and destabilis­e the party. It has to organicall­y integrate. As is evident, this is an endeavour that would be difficult because of the contest between Bengali narratives of nationalis­m and its developmen­t over time and the BJP’s hybrid version, enshrined in books — Hindutva, Hindu Rashtra Darshan — and now being translated into practice.

Steering between the simplistic and the messy complexiti­es of identity politics in West Bengal, the BJP is travelling over a minefield.

Voters and their contradict­ory allegiance­s and primordial attachment­s are whimsical and wayward; none more so than the Bengalis.

Shikha Mukerjee is a senior journalist based in Kolkata

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