Screen: The business of entertainment  
 
  The Indian Express
 
 
 
   PUBLICATIONS
 
  Expressindia
  The Indian Express
  The Financial Express
  Screen
  City Newslines
  Kashmir Live
  Loksatta
  Express Computer
 COMMUNITY
 
  Message Board
 SUBSCRIPTIONS
 
  Free Newsletter
  Express North
American Edition
  IE ARCHIVE
    Search by Date
 
  COLUMNISTS

March 1, 2002
WIDE ANGLE

Just forget the Budget

As the terror at Godhra threatens to spiral out of control...

A pity the nation will not be able to concentrate on the crucial budget or the far reaching consequences of the state election results. The macabre incineration of kar sevaks at the outer signal of Godhra railway station in Gujarat threatens to escalate beyond the administration’s control.

Between the BJP led Union government and the omnibus entity called the Sangh parivar there was always a tacit arrangement, an understanding on a host of issues defining the colour of Indian nationalism.

The executive, namely the BJP, was able to cite the constraints under which it was managing a unwieldy 20 party NDA apparatus as the reason for its compulsory moderation on the Hindutva track. It could not be seen to be pushing for extreme Hindutva because in that event the coalition at the Centre would collapse.

Other members of the Sangh parivar, the RSS and the VHP, for instance, were under no compulsion for tactical restraint. In fact, it adopted towards the Atal Behari Vajpayee administration a tactic made famous by the Communists towards Indira Gandhi in the late 60s — unity and struggle.

For long spells it looked like perfect orchestration between the BJP government and the purely ideological elements in the parivar. But extremist movements have a velocity which cannot always be controlled.

Differences between the parivar and the BJP government had been accumulating. For example, the attack on the PMO, which resulted in the departure of the economic advisor, N.K Singh, from South Block and which weakened the principal secretary, Brajesh Mishra, was directed by the parivar, taking advantage of some fissures among the BJP members of the Cabinet. That Mishra bounced back with enhanced powers reflected on the prime minister’s seniority and stature within the parivar as well as his capacity to dig his heels in. But the differences were only apparently papered over. There was always the danger of the equation between the BJP and the rest of the parivar snapping at some moment of extreme pressure.

Sometimes a sudden surprise, like a bolt from the blue, or as a response to an extreme shock, comes across as anger. Shock defeats in four states, the reversal in Goa, the loss of two assembly seats in Gujarat, have all cumulatively caused the Parivar to angrily list a series of grievances with retrospective effect.

‘‘At this stage we do not care if the BJP government goes,’’ said a prominent Parivar ideologue.

Remember how the government persuaded Jayanendra Saraswati Jagatguru Shankaracharya to give up his fast unto death against cow slaughter? A commission was announced. Well known Gandhian, Dharampal, was not even paid his train fare from Wardha whenever he arrived in Delhi to take part in the commission’s perfunctory meetings. The government, in other words, was not serious about banning cow slaughter. The Shankaracharya was being slighted.

The grievances are not all heaped upon the prime minister. Home Minister Advani also takes some flak. His ministry was able to do nothing about the four senior RSS workers abducted in Tripura. According to parivar sources, the matter was not even taken up with Bangladesh. Indeed, the RSS on its own had to recover the bodies after the pracharaks were murdered.

What happened to Vajpayee’s promise made in December that by March 15 the government would find a way out of the Ayodhya problem? He said he was talking to groups. Which groups? Was it just a trick to derail the Chetavani Yatra?

The parivar is also peeved at the way some ‘‘senior’’ sadhus were offered nothing by way of hospitality when the prime minister received them the other day. ‘‘The sadhus could have been received more politely.’’

The litany of complaints continue right up to the tragedy at Godhra. ‘‘Just look, the government’s statements and the editorials in the English language press seem to suggest that it were the kar sevaks who had murdered the passengers.’’ Then, after a pause, ‘‘why don’t they blame the Muslims who perpetrated the heinous crime?’’

I have given this flavour of the thinking among the higher echelons of the parivar simply to communicate the frightening truth: the Sangh parivar is in a black mood after the recent humiliating electoral reverses.

Last night a journalist from Israeli radio interviewed me on the Godhra incident and what it portends. Let me repeat her question verbatim: ‘‘While General Musharraf is trying to contain religious extremism in his country, is religious radicalism on the increase in India?’’

This is the sort of question journalists contrive to come up with while coping with an issue which is far too complex to lend itself to instant punditry.

And, yet, just ponder for a moment how this Israeli journalist’s mind must have been working. Here was Pakistan, a theocratic state, increasingly under the grip of religious extremists, exploiting Islam for the export of terror worldwide. And yet, with the international community supporting him, Musharraf has seized upon the moment to loosen the extremist strangle hold and embark on far reaching reform towards a modern state. Was India moving in the opposite direction?
Of course this line of thinking is simplistic and somewhat innocent of the Indian reality. But these exactly are the shades in which the world will see us if the Sangh parivar, having lost the electoral battle, in determined to take the battle to the streets.

The government has a great deal to answer for, there can be little doubt about that. What were the central and the state intelligence agencies doing when — it is now commonly recognised — it took weeks of preparations, state sponsorship of kar sevaks, a series of communal incidents, even on trains, all building up to the catastrophe at Godhra.

The irony is that if the VHP had been firmly checked in time (and not engaged in a bizarre pirouette), the interview on Israeli radio would have been a post election survey, a celebration of Indian democracy, its miraculous ability to mediate class, caste, communal, regional, linguistic diversities, welding us slowly into a nation, against the backdrop of an enduring civilisation.

 

 

Earlier Columns

Write to the Editor
Mail this story
Print this story