Thursday, 9 October 2014

The Inimitable Prime Minister

               The Inimitable Prime Minister



                 Like many of my compatriots I have seen and judged Narinder Modi from widely different perspectives. There was a time when I saw him as a mass murderer who had engineered or, at the very least, permitted the anti-Muslim riots. He was portrayed by some as a lackey of the Adanis and the Ambanis, ready to oblige them out of the way and then travel in executive jets for his election campaign at their expense. He was labelled as a dictator who treated his ministers with contempt and was an incipient Hitler.

                     Today many of us have a revised version in our hearts. The new Modi is a person risen from  a less affluent background ,who forsook the pleasures of  family life and spent decades as a Vivekananda- style parivrajak and an RSS pracharak. A man driven by a passionate vision of his beloved country, which he wants to establish as the jagadguru of the world as in days of yore, a work alcoholic who slogs day and night without fatigue, a Prime Minister who is bubbling with ideas on how to improve the quality of life of billions of Indians and a leader who interprets Hindutva not in the parochial sense of anti -minorityism but the efflorescence of  a perennial philosophy that gave tolerance and equidistance from all faiths to the Vedic rishis and made India the broadhearted land giving  shelter to the oppressed of all nations.

                         How has Modi wrought this miracle? I think the magic began when Mani Shankar Aiyar lampooned him as a chaiwala during the election campaign. Another person might have taken offence or hit back at the Stephenian arrogance of this nose-in-the-air ex-diplomat. Modi playfully launched a chai chaupal across the country and invited his countrymen to enjoy a cup of tea at his expense and gossip about this and that with him. He has since used the chaiwala tag frequently to define his humble origins and made political capital of his ability to raise himself to the highest post in the country!
                         He got transformed in many hearts when he called Nawaz Sharief’s bluff and cancelled the talks at the foreign secretaries’ level because Pakistan  tried to be oversmart and asked  its High Commissioner to go ahead with his tea party to the Hurriyat leaders. We warmed up to Modi when he ordered the para-military forces to give a befitting and punishing reply  to the indiscriminate shelling by the Pakis.

                      All of a sudden, India’s Kashmir policy, Pakistan policy and Muslim policy acquired  new definitions.

                      Modi has already fired the first salvoes of the new dispensation. His prime confidant Amit Shah has declared that the strategy this time is to form a BJP-led coalition in J&K. Many observers feel that he will be able to do so. Even the calamity of the unprecedented floods is working to BJP’s advantage, as the flurry of activity in the central forces is contrasted with the somnolence of the local administration. This would  represent a tectonic shift and effectively counter the pro-Muslim bias that has infused the State Govt. policy ever since the State acceded to India in 1948.

                                     Compare and contrast the Vajpayee-led NDA Govt which tried to start a conference of the Central Advisory Board of Education with Vande Mataram and faced a walkout by the education ministers of Congress-ruled States, with Modi who ended his Independence Day speech with Vande Mataram, thus forcing children of all faiths to repeat this slogan without recourse to any overt melodrama.

                       Modi’s Muslim policy is not yet clearly enunciated. Yet one can discern an emerging pattern. He seems to be moving inexorably towards the Australian model of a policy towards Muslims.  Two Australian Prime Ministers have made national broadcasts on the TV, asking the Muslims to behave or else leave . They had not invited the Muslims to come and settle down in Australia. The Muslims had come of their own volition and so they would have to follow the Australian laws like the rest of the population. Their children would have to attend Govt. schools and sing the prayers laid down for all students.

                              The Indian Muslims have not had anyone talking to them with  similar frankness. On the contrary, they have been treated with kid gloves, they have been mollycoddled and treated like a vote-bank. They are permitted to have their own maktabs and madrassas which breed  youth proficient in mindless intoning of scriptural texts but ignorant of modern languages, science and mathematics.

                           For the present, the strategy seems to be to unleash the extreme right of hindutva and permit  low-grade communal skirmishes, with mild reproofs being administered by lower echelons of the BJP hierarchy. If the lessons are not learnt the soft way, there may have to  be a one- time major confrontation to embed the teaching in the psyche of a whole generation. That is a lesson the Hindus  learnt the hard way when the Khalistan movement was buried at one fell swoop. That is the moral many Hindus  have drawn from the way a stable communal peace has prevailed in Gujarat after the post-Godhra violence

                             A  positive point in Modi’s favour is the neat way he has tied up his foreign policy with the fulfilment of domestic promises. On his recent tour of Japan, not only did he persuade the Japanese to invest heavily in India, he   involved them in his pet projects of bullet trains, revamping of cities, building of a new Varanasi as a blend of the ancient and the modern and even the cleaning of the Ganga.

                          Some of us used to feel apprehensive about Modi’s alleged dictatorial attitude. This notion was strengthened when he seemed to be fashioning the PMO as the fulcrum of his administration. And especially when he appointed his old protege Amit Shah as the party president.
But this negative point has been stood on its head by the positive results that the system seems to be achieving from such centralisation of authority. Decision making has been hastened by the abolition of the cabinet committees which had ceased to be vehicles of coordination and got converted into instrumentalities of delay. A bunch of Ministers and MLAs was not allowed to visit Brazil during the World Cup at State expense. A Minister was seen wearing jeans at the airport and ordered to go home and first change into something more decorous. Maneka Gandhi was quietly chastised for making an uncouth bid for Varun’s political ascendancy by denying him a place in the party top brass. Bureaucrats started receiving calls on the RAX phones from the Prime Minister himself, who incidentally also ensured thereby that they remained in office for the mandated twelve hours. There was a not so oblique hint administered through the grapevine that bureaucrats who played golf on week days would not be preferred.

                            Today most people are saying that India voted for Modi mainly because we wanted a strong leader. So we have no business cribbing about Modi’s strong leadership.Was Lee Kuan Yew not a dictator? Was Deng Xiao-Peng not a dictator?

                            A very important factor in my reassessment of Modi is his tremendous sense of humour.I liked the way he played the flute and beat a drum in Japan (although Rahul the heir-apparent did not). We all relished the replies he gave to school students on Teachers’ Day. His frankness in admitting to his childish pranks was admirable. How he stapled the clothes of gentlemen and ladies standing close to each other in marriage parties. How he and his  class -fellows dangled  mouth-watering tamarind before the shehnai artistes   and forced them to suspend their music .
He made fun of his political opponents by predicting with an impish smile that his presenting a copy of the Bhagwad Gita to the Japanese Emperor would be criticised in India as being an act of promoting Hindutva. And not surprisingly, his secular antagonists promptly fulfilled his prophecy.
Talking of prophecies, I cannot but allude to the prediction supposedly made by Nostradamus, in which he not only foretold the rise of Narendra Modi as the leader of a country surrounded on three sides by water, but he also spoke of his phenomenal emergence as a global leader presiding over the destiny of a superpower. He also talked of Hindu nationalism and the re-emergence of India as a world teacher. Other predictions include the disappearance of Pakistan and the integration of Kashmir by India .

                                But Google also takes you to Ramani’s blog, which claims that research has proved that this whole news is a spoof.

                              Be that as it may, many of us have the feeling that Modi was not joking when he obliquely told a boy on Teachers’ Day that he (Modi) had nothing to fear till 2024. He has hinted even otherwise that he will be there for ten years at least. In 2024 Modi will be 73 , very close to his self-imposed upper age-limit of 75 years for political leaders holding high office. What he will do thereafter  is anybody’s guess!



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