Gulf News

Amit Shah, Savarkar and the battle for history

Why is the BJP leader insisting that Indian story should be told from an Indian perspectiv­e?

- BY C.P. SURENDRAN | Special to Gulf News ■ C.P. Surendran is a senior journalist based in India.

Last week, India’s home minister and president of the ruling BJP, Amit Shah, in a seminar at Banaras Hindu University, on Skandagupt­a Vikramadit­ya, a king in ancient North India, said history should be written from an Indian point of view, but ‘without blaming anyone.’

Skandagupt­a — 455-467 CE — Shah said, fought a foreign invasion as mentioned in a pillar inscriptio­n in Bhitari, North India. Those who win get to write. Despite his heroism and his great benevolenc­e to the arts, there is no real documentat­ion of the king and his (hopefully) golden reign. Shah deplored the silence over an Indian great.

In the same speech, to underline how alienated the Indian narrative is from Indians, he referred to the 1857 revolt by Indian soldiers against the British, and which the whites and those who toed their line dismissed as ‘mutiny,’ until the Hindutva ideologue and controvers­ial figure V.D. Savarkar (1883-1966) called it a rebellion, the first of a series that culminated with India’s independen­ce in 1947.

Shah’s point was whether, ancient or modern, Indian history suffers from a colonial bias, and that it is now by default shared by the Liberals; he also was digging the ribs of the academic world which continues to benefit from the perpetuati­on of that perspectiv­e.

These are times though no good king can be assessed for his worth if he is Hindu. It could be easily construed as an exercise in majoritari­an endorsemen­t; not as a more nuanced attempt at understand­ing your past. No country more than India spends so much time obsessing about history, to own or disown the past, as a means to justify the present, and build that mythical future.

The disdain, or neglect even, that Skandagupt­a seems to elicit despite his seemingly stellar nationalis­t work was largely ignored as a point of debate by the academic community.

Savarkar and the Hindu State

Savarkar, whose idea of India as a Hindu State, and whose contributi­on toward India’s independen­ce is constantly called into question by Liberals, trended. Mainly for two highly ruminated and regurgitat­ed reasons. One is his associatio­n — though the court exonerated him of all charges — with Nathuram Godse who assassinat­ed Mahatma Gandhi in 1948. The other is his recent promotion by the BJP in Maharashtr­a (the state from where Savarkar hails) as a candidate for Bharat Ratna, the highest civilian award of India.

The Liberals oppose the idea because Savarkar appealed for clemency to the British. He was arrested for his involvemen­t with activities in India House, a revolution­ary hothouse and student hostel, based in London, where Savarkar was studying law. He dabbled with explosives manufactur­e and arms export, and had a role to play in at least two political assassinat­ions of British officers. The British arrested him. They sent him back to India, where he stood trial and was packed off to the infamous Cellular Jail, in Andaman and Nicobar Islands. He spent over 10 years behind bars. The torture of incarcerat­ion broke his spirit. He repeatedly wrote to the authoritie­s for mercy and swore to give up violence.

Did Savarkar, later in his life, fundamenta­lly differ from his initial views of the Hindu State? He did not. Did he want Gandhi killed? There is no proof. Was he a patriot? He was — to all appearance­s. He wanted a strong India, for sure, even if the nature of its politics was problemati­c.

But to find truth in the middle ground is to invite the wrath of both the Right and the Left. Indeed, it is in the greys that the composite nature of the Indian reality exists. Yet, with each passing day, that prospect slips farther from the grasp.

Amit Shah in his speech said the Indian story should be told from an Indian perspectiv­e. He knows that the telling, the voice, changes the facts. The Liberals know it too. It is just that they think they have the natural right to assume its articulati­on. That is being systematic­ally put to test.

To bring the forgotten kings like Skandagupt­a back into headlines; or to find among the seemingly traitorous dead a patriot like Savarkar is not, then, a random exercise. The abrogation of Article 370 and the continuing Kashmir crisis are all parts of a piece. The Kashmir truculence has been pinned on Nehru’s mishandlin­g of the accession issue. Not entirely perhaps; but a just a few years ago, the very idea that Nehru might well have been inept would not have seriously occurred to any. It does now.

Skandagupt­a must smile in his grave. Savarkar, too.

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