Ummm... Yes we can! Yes we can destroy a 400-year old heritage structure.

Thaths

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/07/10/AR2008071002716_pf.html

India's Unlikely Obama
Hindu Nationalist Models Campaign for Premier After U.S. Presidential
Candidate's

By Rama Lakshmi
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, July 11, 2008; A08

NEW DELHI -- An 81-year-old Hindu nationalist who wants to become
India's next prime minister has chosen an unlikely model for his
election efforts, the Internet-based campaign of Sen. Barack Obama.

For a few months, a small team of political strategists, computer
specialists and management graduates in New Delhi has been studying
Obama's speeches and slogans, Web site, campus outreach and rhetoric
of change.

"About 100 million first-time voters will enter the election landscape
next year. That is a staggering number of young people. And the Indian
youth is impatient for change," said Sudheendra Kulkarni, who heads up
strategy for the campaign.

His candidate is L.K. Advani of the Bharatiya Janata Party, or BJP, a
nationalist group that hopes to upset the ruling Congress party in
elections next May.

"We want to project the image of Advani around the idea of change the
same way that Obama's message resonated with people's hunger for
change," Kulkarni said.

More than two-thirds of India's 1 billion-plus people are younger than
35, making it one of the youngest emerging economies in the world.
Rising income and aspirations, along with rapid urbanization, are
forcing political parties to reimagine their old, top-down style of
election campaigning.

Even though India is a parliamentary system based on the British model
that stresses parties as opposed to leaders, the BJP has found that in
the past few elections, personalized campaigns have reaped better
dividends and worked well with young voters.

"Like the Obama brand, we need to create a buzz around Advani-ji,"
said Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi, a BJP member of Parliament and a key
campaign official, attaching the Hindi honorific "ji" to the veteran
leader's name. Naqvi recently returned from a leadership program at
Yale University with a notebook full of observations from the
presidential primaries.

The party predicts that, like in the Obama campaign, technology will
play a central role in attracting the youth. It plans to use
cellphones and the Internet as important media of political
communication. India, with one of the world's fastest-growing
cellphone markets, now has 185 million subscribers; 5.5 million are
added a month.

In May, Kevin Bertram of Washington-based Distributive Networks spoke
at a packed conference in New Delhi about his aggressive use of text
messaging in Obama's campaign.

Work on creating a Web site for Advani that is similar to Obama's is
also underway.

"Obama's site successfully created communities of supporters and
voters. It was used to call a meeting of friends and plan events,"
said Prodyut Bora, 33, head of the campaign's technology initiative.
"We would like the Advani portal to enable millions of voters to
connect with him and with each other. This would encourage people to
become Advani's local campaigners."

Bora's team has uploaded several film clips from Advani's political
career onto YouTube and plans to target social networking sites that
young people frequent, such as Orkut and Facebook. In March, when
Advani's memoir, "My Country, My Life," was published, the party
created a Web site with reviews, videos and speeches. Campaign
managers hope the book will play the same role as Obama's "The
Audacity of Hope."

Advani's career in politics spans six decades; he has served as a
deputy prime minister.

In 1992, he and his strident Hindu chauvinistic rhetoric were widely
viewed as inspiring a mob to demolish a 16th-century mosque,
triggering a wave of sectarian rioting. In recent years, he has toned
down his words and moved toward the center to gain wider acceptance.

Some analysts find talk of the Obama campaign model for Advani odd.

"That particular campaign style worked for Obama because he is a
young, fresh-faced, charming man who promises change. But Advani has
too much baggage, both good and bad, attached to him," said
Ramachandra Guha, a political historian with the New India Foundation,
a Bangalore-based research group. "It strains one's credulity to
imagine the austere, unsmiling Advani being rebranded like Obama."

Another politician trying to woo the youth is the 37-year-old heir
apparent of the Congress party's ruling political dynasty, Rahul
Gandhi. His office said that while it, too, has "flooded" the YouTube
and Flickr Web sites with images of Gandhi, such campaigns cannot go
far in India, where Web reach is limited and a quarter of the
population lives in poverty, according to official estimates.

Bora agreed that 75 percent of the political networking in India will
have to be done offline. The BJP began a series of programs in January
that it says are meant to instill a sense of honor and responsibility
in first-time voters. The youth are given trendy wristbands that say,
"I am proud to be a first time voter."

"People ask me if we are adopting the Obama campaign strategy for
Advani-ji," Bora said. "My answer is: 'Replication, no. Inspiration,
yes.' "

The inspiration is flowing to the BJP office here through many direct
and indirect routes.

A month ago, Abhishek Kumar, an Indian-born software engineer from
Houston, e-mailed the BJP about his volunteer work for Obama. He
organized American young people for the "Nation for Change" rally in
April and worked as a phone bank officer. He sent a proposal to the
Advani team for drawing in young voters. The campaign team has invited
him to India for two months.

"I am not even an American citizen, and I cannot vote," Kumar, 26,
said from Houston. "But because of my work, I feel that the Obama
campaign is my own campaign. That is the same feeling I want to bring
among the Indian youth for the Advani campaign."

But perhaps the most enduring image that many Indians have of Obama is
a recently released photograph of his personal luck charms. In the
collection there was a Hanuman figure, the Hindu monkey god.

Immediately, a group of overjoyed priests at a Hanuman temple here
began performing an 11-day ritual prayer for Obama's victory.

-- 
"I saw this in a movie about a bus that had to SPEED around a city, keeping
 its SPEED over fifty, and if its SPEED dropped, it would explode. I think
 it was called, 'The Bus That Couldn't Slow Down'." -- Homer J. Simpson

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