The Asian Age

RAJIV GANDHI’S BLUNDERS HELPED BJP RISE

- ASHHAR KHAN the

Rajiv Gandhi’s handling of Shah Bano case and shila nyas at Ayodhya helped BJP

Former Union home secretary, Madhav Godbole, who quit after the demolition of Babri Mosque in 1992 was not far from the truth, when he described former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi as the “second most prominent kar sevak, after Nayar, the district magistrate of Faizabad, who encouraged the clandestin­e placement of the Ram Lalla idol in the Babri Masjid on December 22, 1949.”

It was Rajiv Gandhi’s political blunders of conceding to the demands of the fundamenta­lists led to the resurgence of the BJP and revival of the Ayodhya dispute, which rekindled scars of partition and eventually completed the division between Hindus and Muslims in the country.

It was in 1985, Rajiv Gandhi reeling under various controvers­ies, including the Bofors scam. In a bid to get out of the crisis, Rajiv began his mistakes of tinkering with India’s sociorelig­ious fabric.

The first was to overturn the Supreme Court verdict in the Sha Bano case on the triple talaq issue. This was an attempt to appease the Muslim fundamenta­lists and the Muslim Personal law Board. Rajiv Gandhi enacted a law abolishing the alimony provision in conformity with the Sharia that principall­y govern

the Muslim personal laws. Rajiv Gandhi’s “regressive” move upset the secular minded Muslim leaders and one of the prominent Muslim face in his Cabinet, Arif Mohammed Khan quit in protest against the move.

This decision opened the can of worms. The Hindu fundamenta­lists, including the BJP launched a scathing and relentless attack on Rajiv Gandhi over the Sha Bano issue. Surprising many, Rajiv Gandhi in his socalled balancing act, ordered the locks on the Ram Janam Bhoomi-Babri Masjid in Ayodhya to be removed. Until then, a priest had been permitted to perform puja once a year for the idols installed there in 1949. This step catalysed the rise of the right wing politics in India. And BJP, which that time had only two MPs, rose like a Phoenix.

In 1989, Rajiv Gandhi went ahead with negotiatio­ns with the Vishwa Hindu Parishad and allowed Shilanayas, when the first stone of the proposed temple was placed. At this juncture, Rajiv Gandhi riddled with troubles. His mishandlin­g of the situation in Punjab, Kashmir and Sri Lanka had resulted into the rise of terrorist activites in the country. To make matters worse for him, V.P. Singh quit the Congress and started his own party. Rajiv Gandhi thought the pandering to the majority community could be the only way to consoldiat­e his position. Toeing a Hindutva line, Rajiv Gandhi talked of a ‘Ram Rajya’ during his election campaigns.

The assurance of a “Ram Rajya” could not save Rajiv Gandhi, who lost the 1989 elections to V.P. Singh led Opposition. However, his move to open the locks benefitted the BJP, which stepped on the issue and in 1989 the party tally rose from two to eighty Lok Sabha seats. Then came L.K. Advani’s repeated rath yatras for the constructi­on of the Ram Mandir and the consistent rise of the BJP. If Rajiv Gandhi ushered in the rise of the BJP, the former Prime Minister, P.V. Narasimha Rao consolidat­e the Hindutva brigade with inaction during the demolition of the Babri Masjid by the Hindu fundamenta­lists in 1992. After the demolition, the Central government went ahead and dismissed the Kalyan Singh led BJP government in Uttar Pradesh and virtually made him a martyr.

 ??  ?? Rajiv Gandhi
Rajiv Gandhi

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India