OutLookIndia.com

Magazine | Jun 14, 2004

KERALA

Orange Letter Day

A pro-NDA verdict opens the account at last in the
south state. One-off, or
is the parivar consolidating?

JOHN MARY

When Archbishop Cardinal Mar Varkey Vithayathil, on
the eve of the Lok Sabha
elections, said on TV that the BJP was "not
untouchable", he was only
underscoring an attitudinal shift in the Syrian
Christian mindset. From
being totally anti-BJP, the community has begun to
show tolerance towards
the saffron party. The proof of this came the day the
results were declared.
For the first time, the BJP-led NDA alliance opened
its account in Kerala.

It returned a Syrian Christian (former Union minister
P.C. Thomas) to the
Lok Sabha from the Catholic heartland of Muvattupuzha
in central Kerala. His
Indian Federal Democratic Party is part of the NDA.

The total voteshare of the BJP alliance in Kerala also
crossed the
single-digit threshold, posting a never-before 12.1
per cent. Of this, the
BJP alone notched 10.4 per cent of the votes polled.
To top it all, the BJP
came first in five assembly segments and second in
another five. This, in a
state where it does not have a single representative
in the assembly.

Obviously, the state BJP is upbeat since it is seen to
be making a slow but
steady electoral breach in a state where minorities
make up 45 per cent of
the population and the remaining 55 per cent Hindus
are strongly polarised,
either with the Left or the Congress. Besides, Hindu
social organisations
like the forward caste Nair Service Society and the
Sree Narayana Dharma
Paripalana Yogam of the backward Ezhava community have
kept a safe distance
for fear of being overrun by the BJP.

"We are looking forward to the local government
elections due a year from
now and the assembly elections thereafter. Our
strategy will be to position
ourselves as a credible alternative to the Congress
and the Left, which are
too close to be seen separately," says NDA state
convenor B.K. Shekhar.

According to him, the BJP's Muvattupuzha experiment is
a signpost. The party
could ride piggy-back to the legislature provided it
props up the likes of
Thomas.

The Left parties, especially the CPI(M), sense the
danger too. Says state
secretary Pinarayi Vijayan: "It is of concern that the
decline in the
Congress-led alliance's vote has benefited the BJP."
While the Congress-led
UDF's voteshare dipped by 8.57 per cent, the LDF has
gained only 2.48
percentage points. So the net gainer has been the NDA,
which added 5.5 per
cent to its voteshare at the expense of the UDF.

There are still doubters like Professor Ninan Koshy,
ex-director of the
World Council of Churches, who believes the BJP will
find it difficult to
overcome conventional socio-political impediments. He
cites two reasons for
the BJP not being able to enlarge the space between
the strong bipolar Left
and not-so-left coalitions in Kerala. One, the
overriding anti-government
sentiment is likely to benefit the well-entrenched
Left much more than the
BJP in the next assembly elections. Secondly, the
BJP's appeal has reduced
for the electorate since it has no chance of
dislodging the Congress-led
government in Delhi in the short-term.

Sangh parivar ideologue P. Parameswaran, though, has a
different take. He
feels the shrinking Hindu population in the state has
spawned a greater
"awareness" among the community that minorities would
soon overtake them.

The Hindu population has declined from 57 per cent to
55 per cent over the
decade even as Muslims and Christians climbed to 23.34
per cent and 19.32
per cent respectively. This, according to
Parameswaran, is sure to encourage
a wary Hindu population to gravitate towards a
nationalist pro-Hindu party.

Countering Koshy, Parameswaran points out that the BJP
is still very much
the party-in-waiting at the Centre. So the BJP-minded
sections would only be
happy to rally behind the most credible alternative to
the Congress-CPI(M)
axis in Delhi

The alarm bells have certainly begun to ring in the
Left and the Congress.
Over the years, the rss presence has become
increasingly visible throughout
the state.There are about 5,000 shakhas in operation
now. The Sangh has
identified nearly 10,000 locations for active work. In
1,330 places, active
discussions and drills take place everyday. Slowly but
surely, the Hindutva
brigade is spreading its roots in a state where it has
hitherto always drawn
a blank.



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