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‘Decisive’ words: Kutte ka bachcha - Modi’s analogy splits open riot woundsOUR
SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT'...Someone else is driving a car and we’re sitting
behind, even then if a puppy comes under the wheel, will it be painful or
not? Of course, it is'
Narendra Modi to Reuters

*New Delhi, July 12: *Narendra Modi today projected his “decisiveness” as
an imperative in the season of policy paralysis but the message, probably
meant for an English-reading audience, was drowned by a “*kutte ka bachcha*”
reference made in the context of the Gujarat riots.

The BJP’s presumptive candidate for Prime Minister made the comments during
an interview to Reuters, the international news agency, which uploaded
edited excerpts on its website today and said that the replies had been
translated from Hindi. The interview was given on June 25 at Modi’s
official residence in Gandhinagar.

In the interview, Modi asserted that he was “decisive” but not
“authoritarian”, agreed he was a polarising figure but strictly in a
political sense and not a communal one, said he was a “human being” besides
being a chief minister and defined the “real Modi” as a “nationalist”, a
“born Hindu” and a “patriot”.

He saw no contradiction in dovetailing the classic RSS template of “Hindu
nationalism” with being “progressive, development-oriented and a
workaholic”.

The message that Modi, who mostly spoke in Hindi, wanted to send to an
international audience was clear. “If you call yourself a leader, then you
have to be decisive. If you’re decisive then you have the chance to be a
leader. These are two sides of the same coin… People want him (a leader) to
make decisions. Only then they accept the person as a leader. That is a
quality, it’s not a negative,” he said.

The emphasis on “decisiveness” as a hallmark of “leadership” is a
thought-through BJP strategy to show up the Manmohan Singh government as
limp and indecisive. Modi is expected to be projected as a leader with
little or no patience to look over his shoulders before clinching a
decision.

But the decisiveness was in danger of being seen as recklessness by the
evening.

Asked if he regretted what happened in the riots of 2002, Modi said:
“India’s Supreme Court is considered a good court today in the world. The
Supreme Court created a special investigative team (SIT) and top-most, very
bright officers who oversee the SIT. That report came. In that report, I
was given a thoroughly clean chit, a thoroughly clean chit.”

Then Reuters’ translated version quoted Modi as saying: “Another thing, any
person if we are driving a car, we are a driver, and someone else is
driving a car and we’re sitting behind, even then if a puppy comes under
the wheel, will it be painful or not? Of course, it is. If I’m a chief
minister or not, I’m a human being. If something bad happens anywhere, it
is natural to be sad.”

The word “puppy” drew a firestorm of protests on Twitter and elsewhere amid
allegations that a despicable comparison was being made to the riot victims.

Later it emerged that the full sentence was, barring five words, in Hindi
and many found the choice of metaphor more offensive and insensitive than
the translated “puppy”.

The footage of the interview shows Modi as saying: *“Hum agar *car* chala
rahen hain… aur koi *drive* kar raha hai aur hum peechhe baithe hain, phir
bhi ek chhota kutte ka bachcha bhi *car* ke neeche aa jata hai, toh humein *
pain* *feel* hota hai ki nahin? Hota hai.”*

This evening, Modi tweeted: “In our culture every form of life is valued &
worshipped. My original interview with Reuters
http://nm4.in/<http://www.google.com/url?q=http%3A%2F%2Fnm4.in%2F&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AFQjCNHFn_2fnlBSRR72xJq8Cmmgd0ipjg>
138jss0.…
People are best judge.”

The tweet did not explain why he had referred to the back seat though Modi
was at the decision-maker’s wheel in Gujarat as chief minister when the
riots took place.

The BJP, sections of which felt that Modi should have articulated his views
in a less controversial manner, said it was “despicable” to say he was
drawing any comparisons with a community.

The tone of the other comments in the interview was in line with the idea
of propelling Modi on the stump as a “no-nonsense” head. The objective
appeared to be to turn apolitical fence-sitters around and reassure his
traditional support base.

Some heard in the intemperate remarks an undeclared assessment that Modi’s
attempt to cast himself as a moderate had not made much headway among the
minorities and that he had decided to focus on those frustrated with the
state of affairs, including the economy, and his core constituency.

On the 2002 riots, Modi claimed he had “absolutely” done the “right thing”
that year. “Absolutely,” he declared, adding: “However much brainpower the
Supreme Being has given us, however much experience I’ve got and whatever I
had available in that situation and this is what the SIT had investigated.”

Modi addressed a concern among his party colleagues that he has an
authoritarian streak. “If someone was an authoritarian, then would he be
able to run a government for so many years? Without a team effort, how can
you get success? And that’s why I say Gujarat’s success is not Modi’s
success. This is the success of Team Gujarat.”

Modi claimed he never “dreams of becoming anything”, quizzed on who he
would emulate if he became Prime Minister, but humility did not appear a
forte. “I can say that since 2003, in however many polls have been done,
people have selected me as the best CM,” he said, adding that many of those
polled were from outside Gujarat.

He said there came a time when he wrote to Aroon Purie, chief editor of the
India Today Group, to keep him out of the competition (for best-run states)
and “give someone else a shot at it”.

On the perception that he was “too polarising a figure”, Modi said: “If in
America, if there was no polarisation between Democrats and Republicans,
then how would democracy work? …If everyone moved in one direction, would
you call that a democracy?”

Modi restated his definition of secularism as “India first” and said that
while seeking votes, he would not divide the electorate into Hindus,
Muslims and Sikhs. “Religion should not be an instrument in your democratic
process,” he said, less than a week after his political aide Amit Shah had
emphasised he would like to see a Ram temple in Ayodhya.

Modi denied the suggestion that his evolution as a “brand” was the result
of a public relations strategy. He claimed that he had never employed a PR
agency.

Maintaining that there was a “huge difference” between the West and India,
he said neither a PR agency nor the media could “make anything of a person”
here.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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