Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Converting valour into votes is just not done

Did the brave jawans perform their duty and lay down their lives for someone to ask for votes in their name?

- GOPALKRISH­NA GANDHI Gopalkrish­na Gandhi is distinguis­hed professor of history and politics, Ashoka University The views expressed are personal

There is such a thing as “Not done”. And such a thing as “Simply not done”. Who decides that? Who tells us “Don’t! That is simply not done”? Where are the rules for that not-done-ness laid down? No one, and nowhere.

It is one’s own conscience that tells us what is being contemplat­ed or being done is not ‘on’, wrong, unethical. There are no rules to that sense, no codes to guide us. But there it is, that sense of a line that is not to be crossed, a norm that is not to be flouted.

Similarly, there is such a thing as “rightly done”, “natural”, “right”. Who has set that right-ness ? Where is it laid down that suchand-such is the right thing to do ? No one and nowhere. Except in one’s instinct for doing right. Just as migratory birds have an instinct for finding and flying in the right flight path without any“leader ”, no memory of previous journeys, no map. Respect for one’s seniors is one such natural instinct. And pride in the armed forces is another.

Many years ago, I was among many – at least 50 others – in the tea lounge of New Delhi’s India Internatio­nal Centre. A healthy scepticism is in the air there, always. Both words are important – healthy and scepticism. There is nothing low there, nothing even remotely malign. But no one there is the kind who can be taken for a ride, or can be fooled. Everyone is, to put it in Tamil, ‘vishayam terinjavar’ – or in Hindi , ‘samajhdar’ – aware of things. That 50 something people were sipping beverages and eating snacks, each in her or his own world, when an elderly gentleman entered the lounge. Tall, erect, be-turbaned. Almost everyone recognised him and everyone in one moment, one natural instant, stood up – young and once-young, man and woman, academic, activist, writer, artist, homemaker, every single one.

Respect is not taught. It just comes. Arjan Singh, Marshal of the Indian Air Force, former Chief of our Air Force, one of the heroes of the Indo-Pakistan war of 1965, decorated with the Padma Vibhushan, appointed to diplomatic and public offices,

post-retirement but, above all, loved and respected for being the young Wing Commander who on 15 August 1947, as acting group captain, led the first fly-past of RIAF aircraft over the Red Fort in Delhi, had come with his wife, Teji Sigh. The great man smiled and waved his hand in acknowledg­ment and then settled down with his wife for refreshmen­ts. Everyone in the lounge sat down too. Marshal of the Indian Air Force Arjan Singh would have turned 100 years today. A lovely thing had “just happened”.

Pride in the armed forces, in security forces, men and now women as well, who lay their lives on the line for us, for the country, is not taught. It just comes. And so when I read our prime minister saying at an election rally in Latur, Maharashtr­a, to firsttime voters to dedicate their vote “to the Air Force which carried out the air strikes at Balakot and to those jawans who were martyred in Pulwama”, I was in disbelief.

Dedicate the votes to the air force and to jawans? Did they perform their duty, lay down their lives for someone to ask someone for votes? That sentence meant – who will deny it? – dedicate your vote to me.

Not done, I said to myself. Simply, simply not done. Here are braveheart­s laying their lives on the line for our country and their daring, their training, their striving, is used to seek votes.

A lal salam to the Communist Party of India (Marxist) for taking this up with the Election Commission (EC), as a violation of its directive to parties to refrain from invoking the armed forces for seeking votes. If as is only expected of the EC it reproaches the prime minister for this blatant exploitati­on of a national sentiment, the EC will do itself proud, the Armed Forces a service.

This year is the 20th anniversar­y of the Kargil War. Also of the general elections to the 13th Lok Sabha. The celebratio­n of gallantry that year was sought by some – not by prime minister Vajpayee – to be conflated with the campaign for votes, the nation’s patriotic pulse made to beat to a political tune. Religious organisati­ons rushed to hospitals to give valuable gifts to injured personnel and also – religious books. The Army, noticing this, asked them to desist.

We owe it to the great Marshal of the Air Force today, his centenary day, to say “Sir, it will not happen – converting valour to votes will simply not be done”. Jai Hind!

PRIDE IN THE ARMED FORCES, IN THE SECURITY FORCES, MEN AND NOW WOMEN AS WELL, WHO LAY THEIR LIVES ON THE LINE FOR US, FOR THE COUNTRY, IS NOT TAUGHT. IT JUST COMES

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