*Modi, Advani and Sangh’s Agenda*


*Ram Puniyani*



The nomination of Narendra Modi as the chief of campaign committee of BJP
for 2014 elections (June 2013) has created more than a storm in the tea
cup. Incidentally it is the first time ever that such a nomination has
created 24x7 news and controversy. It has a lot to do with the propaganda
machinery, which Modi has created around him. The atmosphere being created
is that this nomination is like being nominated as the Prime Ministerial
candidate or a prelude to it, which may be true. The major opposition to
this came from Modi’s own mentor Lal Krishna Advani, who for quite some
time has been the one to promote and protect Modi. It is his politics due
to which Modi has his present stature and power within BJP and in Gujarat.
Advani was the one to suggest his name as the Chief Minister of Gujarat,
when Gujarat’s political fortunes were declining, and Modi revived those
electoral fortunes, the linkage between carnage 2002 and Modi’s rise to
power is a matter of conjecture.



With the discernible role of Modi in Gujarat violence, the then Prime
Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee wanted Modi to be sacked but it was Advani,
who saved Modi’s skin. Even earlier it was Advani who promoted Modi to the
forefront. The reason was nothing personal; it was the matching political
agenda of both these swayamsevaks, Modi and Advani, who were working in
tandem to enhance the creeping communalism in the polity of the nation.
They are swayamsevaks of RSS and have been major players in the RSS agenda
of Hindu Rashtra. Advani, having brought BJP to the forefront from two
seats in 1984 Lok Sabha elections to the later 161 in the post Babri
demolition elections and to further peak of 182 in 1999, with the further
polarization. Advani’s communal actions catapulted BJP and it became the
major opposition party and then came to the seat of power in Center for
close to six years. Advani, being a shrewd politician knew that though he
is the one responsible for the BJP’s enhanced fortunes, he also realized
that his divisive actions will prevent other political parties to enter in
to an alliance with BJP. It is because of this that he pushed forward the
name of a fellow swayamsevak, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, who managed to keep a
moderate image despite having the same agenda of Hindu rashtra.



After Vajpayees innings as PM, Advani’s Prime Ministerial ambitions forced
him to adopt a moderate image. The demolisher-in-chief of Babri mosque
started making moderate noises to the extent that he picked up Jinnah’s
speech in Pakistan Constituent Assembly on 11th August 1947, to call him a
secular leader. This speech alone cannot be the base of evaluating Jinnah,
as it is the same Jinnah, who was the Chief of Muslim League and he was the
one who gave the muscles and teeth to the communal ideology of ‘Two Nation
Theory, the ideology which was shared both by Hindu and Muslim
communalists. Calling Jinnah secular was probably overkill as by that time
RSS combine had consolidated the Hindus around ‘hate Muslims and hate
Jinnah’. To swallow this statement from Advani was a bit too much for the
patriarch, RSS, and so Advani was dumped. RSS as such also wanted a change
of guard keeping the age factor in mind. For the lack of any credible face,
Advani had to be resurrected again for 2009 general elections.



As such RSS had also some reservations about giving the command to Modi as
RSS wants the primacy of organization over individuals. Modi overshadows
the organization to which he belongs. But in case of Modi, RSS seems to
have made an exception as Modi has cultivated his appeal through carefully
constructed propaganda and through the communal polarization brought in by
his role in the Gujarat carnage. RSS politics is an Indian version of supra
authoritarian politics, couched in the identity of religion, it’s a sort of
fascist politics. Fascist politics needs a charismatic mass leader, so in
deference to the political contingency RSS has loosened its reservations
about Modi and has to accept his uncontrollable rise.



In the whole drama, as it is unfolding, the divisive image of Modi is
making other NDA allies to shift away from BJP. These allies have to
nurture their own constituencies amongst minorities, so they cannot easily
accept the leadership of Modi. So the already deflated NDA will be further
deflated and barring the diehard Hindutva Shiv Sena and communal Akali Dal
all others may desert the ship which is likely to be captained by Modi. In
this case what is noteworthy is the role of RSS. While Advani raised the
banner of revolt, it was only a phone call from RSS supremo that Advani did
a climb down. For swayamsevaks trained by RSS, there is no question of
defying the dictates from Nagpur. This is for number of reasons. One that
these swaymasevaks are taught that their primary loyalty is to RSS and
Hindu Rashtra. One recalls that when the previous avatar of BJP, Bhartiya
Jansangh merged into Janata party after the lifting of emergency in 1977,
the other constituents of Janata party asked the Jansangh members to severe
their links with RSS. The Jansangh components broke away from Janata Party
leading to split in Janata party and retained their umbilical cord and
their ideology with RSS. Atal Bihari Vajpayee the supposedly moderate face
of BJP, in Staten Island, in US, while talking in to the NRIs reaffirmed
that he is primarily a swayamsevak and later a Prime Minister.



Apart from ideological factors there are electoral factors which are
operative as well. The main strength of BJP at electoral level comes from
the RSS volunteers, who sweat it out to make their nominees win. The
organization of BJP is tightly controlled by RSS through the organizing
secretaries of BJP, who are the nominees from RSS. RSS felt rewarded as Ram
Temple issue picked up, Advani’s divisive Rath Yatra led to series of acts
of violence and communal polarization went to higher levels, which were
electorally profitable to the Hindutva politics. Today the stage has come
where on one hand the BJP has been declining in the electoral arena and on
the other the regional parties are coming up with big strength. These
regional parties are more focused on their local issues, so one does not
know which way they will turn after the election results.



The whole episode has demonstrated two major things. It has shown the
polarizing impact of Narendra Modi. People also perceive that he is
dictatorial in his attitude and when in power he is capable of usurping all
the power to himself. This authoritarian character is being projected as
his being ‘powerful’. The other leaders in Gujarat have perceived it and ex
BJP leaders have either been marginalized to the full. One cannot be very
hopeful about the attitude of the regional and other parties out for
keeping power irrespective of values. One recalls that when BJP emerged as
the largest single party in 1996 no other party was willing to ally with
it. But just a couple of years later so many of these parties hovered
around BJP to share some power as NDA. RSS-BJP-Modi may be banking on this
historical experience to woo the other parties, still it seems a difficult
task as at that time the sobering presence of Vajpayee was instrumental in
making the other parties fall in to delusion and have the some part of the
cake of power.



Today the challenge for secular movement remains quite mammoth. The ‘social
common sense’ is heavily biased against religious minorities, their plight
is becoming close to second class citizens. The threat of Modi coming to
power does not seem imminent but one cannot say what role BJP-RSS combine
will play to come to power. Earlier also one has seen that after every
communal violence, the communal formations become stronger. Communalists
know it too well. It is a dangerous portent for the country. The simmering
acts of religious violence are strengthening the communal forces at grass
root level. What about Federal front of regional parties? It will be like a
sack of potatoes, with so many prime ministerial aspirants and diverse
political agendas. What about third front? Can it come up as a coalition of
all and sundry? The third front can be viable only on the ground of
democratic, secular and pro poor programs. Who can take the lead for that
is the million rupee question. While dumping Advani and selecting Modi, RSS
has given a clear signal that it is going to orchestrate the aggressive
Hinduta, authoritarian leader with fascist agenda and to try to impose
Hindu rashtra on the secular democratic India. The creeping fascism hidden
behind the persona of Modi and the organization called RSS needs to be
engaged with in right earnest on democratic grounds.




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