Extraordinary And Plenipotentiary Diplomatist July 19 Edition . | Seite 9
COVER STORY
Ideally the morphing of India into Bharat should have begun
immediately after the British left in 1947 having partitioned the
country along religious lines.
overdue commitments like ending the special Constitutional
status accorded to Jammu & Kashmir, construction of the Ram
temple at Ayodhya, and piloting a Uniform Civil Code will
now have to be brought centre-stage. The success of Modi 2.0
in the coming months will largely depend on the sincerity with
which pledges made in the manifesto are pursued. Only this
time there will be no excuses to hand out given the resounding
nature of the people’s mandate.
Wiseacres and carping critics counter “but it is the
economy, stupid,” little realising that facing its challenges
is a 24/7 job, especially in times of volatile markets and the
gathering clouds of global recession. The electoral impact
of an economic downturn or upswing is never certain.
Which is why the Congress’ desperate eff ort to make farmer
distress and record high unemployment the centrepiece of
its campaign did not work. In fact, there has scarcely been
an election in which price rise and joblessness have not been
issues. But no government has been voted in or out purely
on the strength of economic indices. Rising GDP does not
necessarily rope in votes or a falling rupee impact the ballot
box. It is the larger message of hope that counts.
Ideally the morphing of India into Bharat should have
begun immediately after the British left in 1947 having
partitioned the country along religious lines. In retrospect
Gandhi’s blunder in appointing the very British at heart,
Jawaharlal Nehru, as the fi rst Prime Minister despite the
Congress’ unanimous preference for Sardar Vallabhai Patel
set the country back by decades. Nehru by his own volition
was a reluctant Hindu with a visceral disdain for the “RSS
mentality”. His obsession with western ideas like socialism
and secularism moulded the minds of the urban educated
classes over generations. They grew up loathing their own
religious icons and cultural traditions.
Fundamentally, the Modi encore showcases the electoral
validation for a course correction. Revision of history books
incorporating the changed perceptions cannot brook further
delay. Reorienting education holds the key to a Bhartiya
renaissance based on the universal values of sanatan dharm.
Mindsets need to change. This can only be gradual since
large swathes of the voting populace still remain wedded to
a counterfeit concept of secularism preferred by Nehru and
his intellectually challenged bloodline successors.
Donning the clothes of Bharat at a purely political level
marks the defi nite end to decades of vote bank politics. Voting
trends of the latest national poll have only reconfi rmed that
Muslims no longer vote enbloc for any party in particular,
least of all the Congress. So the old chestnut that the BJP has
to be kept out of power to ensure the safety of Muslims and
the underprivileged (Dalits) does not fi nd resonance anymore.
Seeds of the fear were willy nilly sown by Nehru in the 1950s
to ensure that neither deserted the Congress.
More importantly, in the modernised worldview of the
Rashtriya Swayam Sevak Sangh or RSS (the BJP’s godfather),
Hindu nationalism does not in any way confl ict with the
centuries old tradition of tolerance and pluralism as the
Nehruvians would have us believe. Unlike Abrahamic religions
like Christianity or Islam, Hinduism is not anchored in the
God willed certitudes and theological pronouncements of a
single prophet or holy book. In fact, it was never a religion in
the truest sense. For even an atheist can be Hindu. Seeking,
the search for truth, lies at the core of its spiritual heritage and
cultural traditions. Fanning doubts on the country’s future as a
secular republic is a lost cause. Bharat can never be a theocracy.
To sum up Modi 2.0 was a ringing endorsement for a
strong leader of sterling integrity who rose from humble
beginnings. Someone unapologetic about his Hindu heritage;
someone ready to rise to the occasion when dealing with
enemies, external or internal. Implicit in the electoral
landslide was the maturing of the Indian voter who can be
relied upon not to confuse the national interest with bread
and butter issues.
The shrill campaign run by the Congress to vilify Modi
with the help of a misguided western media out of sync with
national realities proved hugely counter productive. The once
Grand Old Party stood reduced to a fringe player, with little
or no chance of a revival in the near future.
The road ahead may have its share of thorns, but for once
it is the right road; a road which remained untraversed since
Independence.
* Author is a senior journalist who has worked for
the Times Of India, Asian Age, Pioneer and Statesman in
responsible positions. He can be contacted at sudhirksingh@
icloud.com
Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Diplomatist • Vol 7 • Issue 7 • July 2019, Noida • 9