>From blogs of NY times
Narendra Modi and the Calculus of Tea By ZACH
MARKS<http://india.blogs.nytimes.com/author/zach-marks/>
[image: Munna, a worker at the NaMo tea stall who uses only one name,
pouring tea in Patna, Bihar, on Sunday.]Resham Gellatly Munna, a worker at
the NaMo tea stall who uses only one name, pouring tea in Patna, Bihar, on
Sunday.

PATNA, Bihar — Arun Pathak, a social worker, and his friends have been
meeting at a tea stall near Patna University’s College of Arts & Crafts for
years. “We’re all regulars here,” Mr. Pathak said, taking a sip of strongly
brewed masala chai.

Last month, a new face showed up at the stall – the printed visage of
Indian opposition leader Narendra Modi, whose Bharatiya Janata Party seeks
to unseat the governing Congress Party in national elections next spring.
In a bid to increase publicity before the massive rally held in Patna, the
capital of the eastern state of Bihar, local B.J.P. officials asked tea
vendors to brand their businesses “NaMo tea stalls” by putting up
promotional posters using Mr. Modi’s nickname.

Mr. Pathak and his friends have continued to gather at the same shop
despite its recent branding as a NaMo tea stall. “We are all Congress
supporters, but we don’t mind them putting up this poster,” he said,
pointing to the image of Mr. Modi. “It’s a democracy. Everyone has the
right to speak his mind. We come here and pull out the newspaper and say
whatever we feel. It doesn’t matter if Modi’s face is right there.”

“This is the one place in politics where caste doesn’t matter. People all
vote on caste lines, but over a cup of tea we’re all secular,” Mr. Pathak
said, pointing out the diversity of the customers gathered. “This is where
you find the real pulse of Patna.”

Mr. Modi’s rally on Sunday, marred by a series of low-intensity bomb
blasts, was seen as an important opportunity for Mr. Modi to woo voters in
Bihar, a state with over 100 million people considered crucial to his
party’s chances of taking power from the long-dominant Congress Party,
which faces growing unpopularity amid corruption scandals and weak economic
growth.

And the tea stall campaign is an effort to draw a contrast between Mr.
Modi’s humble beginnings as the son of a tea vendor in the western state of
Gujarat, which he has governed as chief minister since 2001, and Rahul
Gandhi, his Congress Party rival who is the son and grandson of previous
Indian prime ministers. In his youth, Mr. Modi carried tea in a kettle from
his father’s shop to customers waiting for trains at the Vadnagar train
station.

“Here is a man born into a simple, poor family who worked hard to rise up,”
said Ravi Shankar Prasad, deputy opposition leader in the upper house of
Parliament. “Compare that to the Nehru-Gandhi Congress Party dynasty. They
have been passing down power from one generation to the next, but after 60
years of this rule, the people have had enough. Modi’s rise from a chai
wallah to the prime minister’s chair will show the great power of Indian
democracy,” Mr. Prasad said, using the Hindi term for tea seller.
[image: Mukesh Nandan, a Bharatiya Janata Party worker who administered the
NaMo tea stall campaign, at Gandhi Maidan in Patna, Bihar, on Sunday.]Resham
Gellatly Mukesh Nandan, a Bharatiya Janata Party worker who administered
the NaMo tea stall campaign, at Gandhi Maidan in Patna, Bihar, on Sunday.

On Saturday, B.J. P. leaders took a break from rally preparations to make
tea for reporters at a mobile stall, mimicking the elaborate movements for
which India’s chai wallahs are famous, pouring sugary milk tea from one cup
to another. “This is our way of saying we are with the common people,” said
Mukesh Nandan, a local party worker administering the NaMo tea stall
program.

Over two hundred tea vendors had signed up to participate, according to Mr.
Nandan, although local residents said they had not seen more than a handful
of NaMo tea stalls.

On Fraser Road, a main thoroughfare where thousands marched to the rally
waving B.J.P. flags and singing songs dedicated to Mr. Modi, Gopi Tiwari, a
tea vendor, said he was proud to show his support through his stand, a
wooden cart which he had draped in the signature saffron-orange of the
B.J.P.

“It is time for a change. Modi ‘Ji’ was a chai wallah like me so he
understands the poor,” Mr. Tiwari said, using a Hindi title of respect.

“Manmohan Singh just sits on his hands,” he said in reference to the
current prime minister. “Modi Ji will solve our problems. He will attack
Pakistan and bring development like he has in Gujarat.” The customers
around Mr. Tiwari’s stand shouted in agreement as a pot of tea began to
boil over.

This is not the first time a politician has used tea to curry favor with
voters in Bihar. When Lalu Prasad Yadav, a former chief minister of Bihar,
became national railways minister in 2004, he mandated that in trains and
on station platforms tea be served in kulhars, handmade clay cups, to
provide employment for local potters and show his respect for tradition.
The effort largely failed and today India’s train tracks are littered with
used plastic cups.

“It makes sense that these leaders use tea as a promotional stunt,” said
Abhay Singh, a political analyst at The Times of India based in Patna. “Tea
stalls are where people gather to discuss politics, and of course
candidates want people to talk about them when they are taking tea.”

Not all tea vendors have been eager to participate in the promotion of Mr.
Modi. Manoj Rai, a tea vendor who was approached by the B.J.P. but declined
to brand his stand a NaMo tea stall, said he did not want to offend
potential customers. “I like Congress, B.J.P., J.D. (U), R.J.D., all of
them,” Mr. Rai said, listing the abbreviations of major political parties
in Bihar. “If my customers like them, I like them.”

While Mr. Modi is trying to use his humble origins to electoral advantage,
he does remain the prisoner of his failure to stop the anti-Muslim riots in
2002 in which over 1,000 people were killed. Many of the riots occurred in
neighborhoods where poor people lived, including many tea vendors.

Memories of this tragedy still lingered with some of Patna’s tea vendors,
who said they would never consider branding their shops as NaMo tea stalls.
“Muslims cannot trust this man,” said Mohammad Phul, who runs a teashop in
Phulwari Sharif, a predominantly Muslim neighborhood with narrow alleys
dotted with mosques. “If Modi wins there will be riots in the streets,” Mr.
Phul said.

*Zach Marks is a journalist based in India. He is researching roadside tea
vendors around the country with Resham Gellatly. Read more of their work at
chaiwallahsofindia.com
*

*
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With best wishes

S Chander

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