The Sunday Guardian

Assam, Kerala give BJP, Congress tense moments ‘Hope parties using Tagore’s name live up to his ideals’

Great-great grandson of Tagore’s elder brother Satyendran­ath Tagore, SAYS RABINDRANA­TH TAGORE STOOD FOR SECULARISM AND HUMANISM.

- AJIT MAINDOLA NEW DELHI DIBYENDU MONDAL NEW DELHI

The reports for Congress in Kerala and BJP in Assam are not that encouragin­g. No report is suggesting BJP’S comfortabl­e position in Assam. Similarly, it is said that Congress’ return to power in Kerala won’t be easy.

According to reports, no party seems to be getting majority in Assam, where small outfits may play spoilsport. Likewise, the contest is quite close in Kerala. Congress and Left may be claiming their victory, but both the parties are understood to be nervous at the same time. Meanwhile, the DMK and Congress alliance seems to be getting a majority without any difficulty in Tamil Nadu. Similarly, the Bjp-led alliance may win in Puducherry. With this in view, both the Congress and the BJP are keenly and closely watching the Bengal elections. It is a well-known fact that if BJP wins Bengal, then Congress will be in more trouble and if TMC sails through, then BJP will be in an uncomforta­ble position. With four phases of voting still left, BJP is said to be in the fight in Bengal. So, the remaining four phases will be decisive. Interestin­gly, before these four phases of polling in Bengal, AIMIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi and gangster Mukhtar Ansari have become important in the state. Owaisi’s party seems to be damaging the electoral prospects of TMC in seven seats. Meanwhile, UP CM Yogi Adityanath is mentioning the name of Ansari, and saying that as he was dealt with in Uttar Pradesh, no criminal will be spared in Bengal too. Madhya Pradesh home minister Narottam Mishra also referred to Ansari’s name and targeted Mamata Banerjee over what he called her government’s “soft” approach to crimes in Bengal. BJP leaders are adopting all possible strategies to turn the tide in its favour in the last four phases.

BJP strategist­s believe that if Hindutva agenda proves to be ineffectiv­e in Bengal, then it will be difficult for the party to go ahead with the same strategy in other states. Assam is already giving anxious moments to BJP. If the saffron party does not get a majority in Assam, then it will be the fifth state to see the CM appointed by PM Modi and Amit Shah failing to perform satisfacto­rily. Maharashtr­a, Jharkhand, Uttarakhan­d and Haryana are the states where BJP CMS could not perform well. Meanwhile, civic body elections in Himachal Pradesh have also added to BJP’S worries. Kerala and Tamil Nadu poll results will give strength to the Opposition if BJP does not perform well in the states. Congress spared no stone unturned in Kerala. It kept its star campaigner­s out of Bengal in a bid to see that BJP gets defeated there.

At a time when different political parties of Bengal, including the ruling Trinamool Congress (TMC) and the Opposition BJP, are trying to pitch in different literary and reformist icons of Bengal to touch a chord with the Bengali sentiments and score political points during the ongoing Assembly elections in the state, The Sunday Guardian spoke exclusivel­y to a fifth-generation member of the Rabindrana­th Tagore family on his opinions about the present political discourse in the state.

Sudripta Tagore, who is the great-great grandson of Rabindrana­th Tagore’s elder brother Satyendran­ath Tagore, said that he hopes that all political parties who are invoking the name of Rabindrana­th Tagore every now and then to get political mileage, live up to the ideals of Tagore once they come to power.

Speaking to The Sunday Guardian, Sudripta Tagore said, “I am not an active political person, but I am a politicall­y aware person. My hope is that any political party that invokes the name of Rabindrana­th Tagore will in future stand up for what Rabindrana­th Tagore stood for. Rabindrana­th’s ideas and ideals stood for secularism, humanism, nationalis­m, and an end to all bias of caste and other social evils that exist in society. The hope is that whichever party invokes his name shows in action that they are interested in practicing the values that Rabindrana­th Tagore believed in.”

Both the Trinamool Congress and the BJP have often taken the name of Rabindrana­th Tagore in their election campaign. The BJP has also coined their election slogan of “Sonar Bangla” borrowing it from the iconic poetry of Rabindrana­th Tagore. Both the parties have tried to claim supremacy over the legacy of Tagore and his work.

While Union Home Minister and former BJP national president Amit Shah have visited the Shanti Niketan campus in Bolpur where he witnessed Rabindra Sangeet and also paid his respect to the place where Rabindrana­th Tagore would meditate, the ruling Trinamool Congress has also left no stone unturned to claim supremacy over the legacy of Tagore. Trinamool Congress supremo Mamata Banerjee even walked the streets of Shantinike­tan and Bolpur with the portrait of Rabindrana­th Tagore as part of her party’s election campaign.

About the politics being played around the icons of Bengal, Sudripta Tagore said that he is not surprised by the way political parties are using luminaries to attract voters on to their side.

He said, “I am not very surprised because that’s how politics happens in Bengal or for that matter in the country. Political parties always try to look for luminaries which could particular­ly attract that diaspora. You see, it is not only Rabindrana­th Tagore the names of Swami Vivekanand­a, and Netaji Shubash Chandra Bose are also being used by political parties for their campaignin­g in the state. Every political party is trying to win through means that they think will connect them to the voters. I am neither angry nor sad with this because I think that is how political discourse in the country is.”

Sudripta Tagore, who has always lived in a world of education and literature like his forefather­s, runs a school and an orphanage in Shantinike­tan, in Bengal’s Birbhum district. He said that there are only a few living members from the

Tagore family who are still around, while the rest have either moved away or have not survived. Interestin­gly, no one from the direct lineage of Rabindrana­th Tagore survived after the third generation.

Only two families, including Sudripta Tagore’s family, have lived in Shantinike­tan since the times of Rabindrana­th Tagore. Sudripta said that he even went for schooling at the Ashram in Shantinike­tan which was set up by Maharishi Debendrana­th Tagore, father of Rabindrana­th Tagore.

“I have studied in the Ashram which was set up by my great-great grandfathe­r. Here in Shantinike­tan, we believe and practice what Rabindrana­th Tagore and the Tagore family believed even 125 years back. The school I have set up, I envisage to inculcate the values of Rabindrana­th Tagore by blending it with the modern form of education. Rabindrana­th believed in free and open spaces for education, as according to him, it was fundamenta­l to the developmen­t of an individual through their young age. And this is exactly what Shantinike­tan is all about.” Tagore said.

Supdripta, however, said that he is pained to see the vicious political atmosphere in Bengal and that he hoped that the culture of political violence comes to an end soon in Bengal.

 ??  ?? Sudripta Tagore
Sudripta Tagore

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