[Hinduism, btw, was (and still is) *not* a (cohesive) religion as was/is
the case with Judaism, Christianity or Islam, at the least.
It's a basket of a variety of loosely interrelated (Indic) traditions,
evolving over time.
No Vedic gods and goddesses are worshipped by (any section of) today's
Hindus.
The hierarchical and oppressive caste system and the two great mythological
epics - in various versions, the numerous vernacular ones, in particular,
are, apparently, the two commonest threads.
Constant influx of newer and newer elements from outside is *a* prime
driver of change.

Hence, the call of "Hindi, Hindu, Hindustan!" - the attempt to recast and
homogenise Hinduism in the image of the (supposedly adversarial) Abrahamic
religions, has, as yet, met with only limited success, mostly, in the
so-called "cow belt' or the "Hindi heartland".
Considerable obstacles still remain.

《“This isn’t the Hindi heartland, it is not Ram Rajya. Neither Durga nor
Kali sit on a rath. The BJP’s central unit just doesn’t understand that
Hinduism here is very different.”
...
Rath yatras have long since been an electoral tool for the BJP. Former
Madhya Pradesh chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan had flagged of(f) his
campaign with a similar rally from Bhopal in the run up to the recently
concluded assembly polls.

“But in Bengal, it evoked images of the violence that took place in 1992.
The Trinamool Congress used this to attack us. There were protests from
civil society groups and even opposition within the party,” said a senior
BJP leader, in charge of a Lok Sabha seat in south Bengal.

The leader added that there remained a greater problem for the BJP’s
campaign in Bengal – a distinct difference in how the BJP’s Delhi-unit and
the RSS viewed Hinduism, as opposed to how the state’s Hindu voters viewed
their religion.

A Bengal RSS leader, who has been in the state for decades admitted, “This
has been a problem for decades for the RSS in eastern India, which we have
been able to partly solve in the north-east. For decades, they stayed away
from kali pujo since meat was prasad.”》]

https://www.news18.com/news/politics/the-question-of-bengali-ness-how-wheels-are-falling-of-bjps-rath-yatra-in-bengal-1983649.html?fbclid=IwAR1SCw6AK2RNEkuWOHhYsMkbRRGm0E085rilbHPGYcbYpu18xM8Mf5he7Ww

The Question of Bengali-ness: How Wheels Are Falling off BJP’s Rath Yatra
The greater problem for the BJP’s campaign in Bengal is the distinct
difference in how the BJP’s Delhi-unit and the RSS viewed Hinduism, as
opposed to how the state’s Hindu voters viewed their religion, a party
leader said.

Aniruddha Ghosal |

News18.comUpdated:December 26, 2018, 8:05 AM IST

The Question of Bengali-ness: How Wheels Are Falling off BJP’s Rath Yatra
The BJP has targeted 22 seats in the state in 2019 and rath yatras were to
be an integral part of the campaign. (PTI image)

The Supreme Court’s decision to deny an urgent hearing to the BJP on its
plea challenging the Calcutta High Court order not allowing its rath yatra
is just the latest in a series of mishaps that have punctuated what was to
the party’s key gambit ahead of 2019 Lok Sabha polls.

>From difficulty finding a venue for Amit Shah’s rally to being forced to
give up the ‘rath yatra’ tag, describing it instead as a Ganatantra Bachao
Yatra (Save Democracy March) following controversy – a state committee
leader summarized the party’s woes as a disaster from the beginning.

“This isn’t the Hindi heartland, it is not Ram Rajya. Neither Durga nor
Kali sit on a rath. The BJP’s central unit just doesn’t understand that
Hinduism here is very different.”

The stakes are high. In June, BJP president Amit Shah announced his plan to
win 22 seats in the state and rath yatras were to be an integral part of
the campaign to build momentum in the state. The BJP’s best performance in
Bengal in a Lok Sabha election was in 2014 – with the party winning two
seats in the state with a 16 percent vote margin.

Although, the party argues that it has since emerged as the main
opposition, it was a distant fourth in the 2016 Assembly polls with three
seats and 10 percent of the vote.

The rath yatra that the party had planned was to span over 39 days across
the state and was to be key in the BJP’s plan to break the Trinamool
Congress’s dominion in the state.

“This would serve two purposes. One is the visibility would make voters
realize that we are the alternative and also we would be able to underscore
the misrule of the present regime. But also, this would have enthused our
workers,” said a senior BJP leader.

But with the Supreme Court refusing to hear the matter and the Calcutta
High Court ruling that the “yatra can happen only after a thorough
examination of the 35 reports submitted” by the state government, party
leaders admitted that they were left with only two choices.

“We can either wait for the Supreme Court, hoping for a favourable order –
but by then, there will be little time before the polls. Or, we can disobey
the court orders and carry out a rally or hold smaller events in districts
– which won’t have the same impact,” said a BJP source.

Party leaders, though, admitted that the wheels had begun falling off the
rath yatra.

How the BJP lost its rath

Along the way, from Shah’s announcement in June and the consequent plan to
three chariots traversing 42 Lok Sabha seats to the party’s plea in the
Calcutta High Court – the BJP stopped describing the march as a ‘rath
yatra’, choosing instead to call it Ganatantro Bachao Yatra.

While party leaders explained that this was partly due to the legal
ramifications of asking permission for a rath yatra, the key factor was
that voters in Bengal didn’t take to the idea in the manner the way the
party had expected.

Rath yatras have long since been an electoral tool for the BJP. Former
Madhya Pradesh chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan had flagged of his
campaign with a similar rally from Bhopal in the run up to the recently
concluded assembly polls.

“But in Bengal, it evoked images of the violence that took place in 1992.
The Trinamool Congress used this to attack us. There were protests from
civil society groups and even opposition within the party,” said a senior
BJP leader, in charge of a Lok Sabha seat in south Bengal.

The leader added that there remained a greater problem for the BJP’s
campaign in Bengal – a distinct difference in how the BJP’s Delhi-unit and
the RSS viewed Hinduism, as opposed to how the state’s Hindu voters viewed
their religion.

A Bengal RSS leader, who has been in the state for decades admitted, “This
has been a problem for decades for the RSS in eastern India, which we have
been able to partly solve in the north-east. For decades, they stayed away
from kali pujo since meat was prasad.”

The Trinamool Congress campaign to counter the BJP’s plans in the state was
summed up by Mamata Banerjee’s nephew Abhishek Banerjee last week when he
said, “In the name of rath yatra, they have brought a 7-star AC luxury bus
from Delhi. We have heard of rath yatra of Shri Jagannath or Shri Krishna
(referring to the Rash Mela held in districts like Cooch Behar). But in the
name of rath, communal asuras of Bangla will be riding a luxury bus…we have
to be alert.”

Politics of ‘Bengali-ness’

A fortnight after Amit Shah’s statements and a public meeting in the state,
Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed a rally at Midnapore district and
attacked the Trinamool Congress, alleging that the real face of the
government was the “syndicate”.

“Doing anything in West Bengal without the permission of the syndicate is
impossible…today Bengal is getting worse than the ruined situation that
Left rule had created,” he said.

The Trinamool Congress countered almost immediately, launching a
two-pronged attack. On one hand, the party accused the BJP of also running
a syndicate – one of “religious terrorism” and in a statement by the party,
TMC described the BJP as a syndicate of “fanaticism, lynching, torture,
notebandi and corruption”.

On the other hand, the party launched a parallel campaign on social media
platforms like the ever-expanding WhatsApp networks and on the ground via
party cadre – that the BJP was an ‘anti-Bengali’ party, drawing on ideas of
Bengali identity.

Soon after Shah’s announcement and Modi’s rally, West Bengal CM Mamata
Banerjee flagged off the rath yatra for Lord Jagannath in Kolkata and said,
“There is a close connection between Maa Kali’s Temple and the Jagannath
Temple of Puri…I am praying for peace to reign in Bengal as well as in the
entire country.”

A key factor that helped Trinamool Congress shape the narrative of an
‘anti-Bengali BJP’ was the issue of updation of Assam’s national Register
of Citizens (NRC).

whatsapp
A very popular WhatsApp forward on TMC groups that translates: 'Let there
be protests, Remove the BJP to save Bengalis'.

Banerjee, who posited herself at the heart of the debate in August, claimed
that of the 66% of the Bengalis in Assam, whose names don’t feature in the
first draft, were Hindus.

“Earlier, only one percent of the country’s population, which comprised
educated people and elite families, had birth records. I don’t have birth
certificates of my parents. Does BJP president Amit Shah have the original
birth certificates of his parents,” she asked, before concluding, “One
shouldn’t hope to win the hearts of Bengalis with repression.”

Last month, after the murder of five Bengali men in eastern Assam’s
Tinsukia, Banerjee led the charge and connected the execution-style murders
with the NRC while attacking the Bengal BJP of being “insensitive to the
plight of Bengalis”.

Banerjee pointedly named the victims, identifying them as Hindu Bengalis
from the politically significant Namasudra Dalit community and stuck to the
party’s strategy of portraying themselves as the sole representatives of
Bengali identity.

In fact, the BJP’s central unit had long since identified the importance of
this ‘politics of Bengali-ness’. In September 2017, the party’s Bengal unit
had presented Amit Shah with a 45-slide presentation arguing that the
party’s political strategy needed to focus on “class not caste” and issues
of Bengali-ness.

But the party’s plans on that front are yet to shape.

Take for instance, the party’s attempts to focus on their founder, Syama
Prasad Mukherjee. The Union Ministry of Culture had planned to start a
museum in Kolkata by 2018 which would have showcased his life, with items
such as a letter written by him to Rajendra Prasad, President at the time
of potential attacks on Mahatma Gandhi a month before his assassination.

A task force was created with the aid of National Archives in Delhi, that
had begun compiling the collected works of the BJP founder and had hoped to
utilize Mukherjee’s connect with Bengal and Kolkata as an arsenal in polls.

But the parallel plan of promoting Bengali icons alongside Hindutva in the
state didn’t take off. “The project has been plagued by problems. For
instance, we had hoped to renovate the 184-year-old Currency Building that
overlooks Dalhousie Square in Kolkata for the site. But there were issues
with construction and work is ongoing,” said an official of the Ministry of
Culture.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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