Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
India

Modi prevails over saffron traditionalists

Amulya Ganguli Darpan, 05 Jul, 2014 12:52 PM
    The Hindutva fundamentalists may be slowly realising that the Bharatiya Janata Party's victory is unlikely to help their cause as much as they would have liked.
     
    For instance, any sense of elation which they felt when Narendra Modi said during the election campaign that the Bangladeshi infiltrators would have to pack their bags and leave on the day the results were announced must have dissipated by now.
     
    It isn't only the good neighbourly relations which New Delhi wants to establish with Dhaka which must have disheartened the saffron camp but also the suggestion for visa free entry for Bangladeshis below the age of 13 and above 65 years, which has been opposed by Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi.
     
    What these overtures emphasise is the primacy of development on Modi's agenda, calling for eschewing any possibility of tension in the South Asian region. Since this may not be feasible where China and Pakistan are concerned, New Delhi is apparently keen to establish benign ties at least with Dhaka, ignoring the earlier imputations by the Rashtriya Swayamsevek Sangh (RSS)-led Sangh parivar that the illegal immigrants not only intended to tilt the demographic balance in India in favour of Muslims but also act as "sleeper cells" associated with terrorists.
     
    What is evident from these turns of events is that development has aspects other than mere economic growth. It is not only a matter of roads and bridges - and bullet trains which seem to hold a special fascination for Modi - but also reducing all manner of controversies to the minimum since they may queer the pitch for investment.
     
    The government's exhortations, therefore, to its supporters to be careful in their comments on the social scene are in sync with its desire for a business-friendly environment. Any hint of misogyny, or an attempt at what has been called a psycho-analytic explanation for crimes against women, are to be avoided.
     
     
    Hence the speed with which a Goa minister retracted his disapproval of women wearing short dresses in pubs or bikinis on the beach. A few days earlier, in the same state, a proposal to send a team of legislators to Brazil ostensibly to learn about the handling of World Cup matches was nipped in the bud.
     
    The keen-eyed Modi government, which appears to keep a close tab on events far and near, is clearly aware that neither an egregious display of conservatism nor an uncalled-for trip at the tax-payers' expense will enhance its image of purposefulness.
     
    It is aware that an economic programme, which highlights the capitalistic agenda represented by glittering malls and multiplexes, cannot be implemented in an atmosphere where women have to be careful of not offending ultra-orthodox sentiments.
     
    This very point was stressed by former finance minister P. Chidambaram in the context of the Shiv Sena's Maratha chauvinism and the Congress-led Maharashtra government's ban on bar girls in Mumbai. His view was that a city aspiring to be the financial capital of India cannot allow "parochial and jingoistic statements and misconceived intentions that belong to moral policing".
     
    As is known, despite the caution, the Prithviraj Chavan government is bent on banning dance bars in Mumbai evidently to please the conservative sections of the population.
     
    But by openly disapproving of such sections in the saffron ranks, the Modi government has shown an assertiveness which is not common among the Indian politicians who tend to take the line of least resistance, especially where conservative sensibilities are concerned.
     
    However, by sidelining some of the key preferences of the Hindutva camp on matters of religion such as the Ram temple, or on the social scene such as women's dresses, the government has underlined its wish to follow a new course, which is markedly different from what used to characterise the BJP and the RSS in the 1990s when the traditionalists held sway.
     
    Among their priorities at the time was to rewrite history books to bring them in line with the saffron worldview or rail against the Christian missionaries or call for a ban on cow slaughter. But none of these issues seem to be of interest to the new government, whose primary objective is on containing price rise and reviving the economy.
     
     
    There is little doubt that the present scene will be disappointing for any group in the Sangh parivar which believes that there will be a return to the '90s as when Ashok Singhal of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) said that only Modi can save India from "total Islamisation".
     
    Modi can be said, therefore, to have prevailed against the traditionalists. His trump card is economic revival. If the growth rates go up and there is hope that the employment situation will improve, his acceptability will be even wider than at present even if his "bitter medicines" in the shape of extracting user charges from the public are criticised by his political opponents.
     
    But outside the field of economics, Modi's main achievement may well be the taming of the saffron extremists.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Year after flash floods, has Uttarakhand bounced back to normalcy?

    Year after  flash floods, has Uttarakhand bounced back to normalcy?
    On June 16, 2013, there was unusually heavy rain in Uttarakhand. In the catchment area of the upper Ganga tributaries, rain water flooded the valleys, washing away huge rocks and trees with it, and caused a huge loss to life and property. More than 5,000 people were dead and missing in the state.

    Year after flash floods, has Uttarakhand bounced back to normalcy?

    Modi receives rousing welcome in Bhutan, stresses on B2B ties

    Modi receives rousing welcome in Bhutan, stresses on B2B ties
    Bharat to Bhutan ties got a major fillip as Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi declared his intent to expand "B2B" relations on his maiden visit abroad to the neighbouring Himalayan country with which India shares long-standing close and friendly ties.

    Modi receives rousing welcome in Bhutan, stresses on B2B ties

    Modi dedicates powerful warship to India, calls it historic

    Modi dedicates powerful warship to India, calls it historic
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi Saturday dedicated to the nation INS Vikramaditya, India's largest and most powerful aircraft carrier which significantly enhances blue water capabilities of the Indian Navy.

    Modi dedicates powerful warship to India, calls it historic

    Time to punish those behind 1984 anti-Sikh riots: Sukhbir Badal

    Time to punish those behind 1984 anti-Sikh riots: Sukhbir Badal
    Punjab Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal Friday said that the time had come to punish the perpetrators of the 1984 anti-Sikh riots.  

    Time to punish those behind 1984 anti-Sikh riots: Sukhbir Badal

    Schemes soon to revive Benarasi sari, carpet industries

    Schemes soon to revive Benarasi sari, carpet industries
    The NDA government is preparing a roadmap to restart many small and cottage industries in Varanasi and its neighbourhood that are shut, union MSME Minister Kalraj Mishra said Friday.

    Schemes soon to revive Benarasi sari, carpet industries

    Badal meets Modi, demands probe into 1984 riot

    Badal meets Modi, demands probe into 1984 riot
    Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal Friday called on Prime Minister Narendra Modi here and demanded early resolution of a variety of issues, including terrorism, and a probe into the 1984 anti-Sikh riots.

    Badal meets Modi, demands probe into 1984 riot