Congress
And Caste Parties Decimated, Whither Indian Muslims?
Saeed Naqvi
Over 180 million Indian Muslims will
stand on the margin looking stunned and petrified, watching Narendra Modi and
the BJP make history and colour the nation with saffron. What a predicament for
the world’s second largest Muslim population which equals the populations of
Germany, France and Spain put together.
Where will the Muslim turn now? In UP
and Bihar he stands at a cul de sac.
Disenchantment with the Congress had
been gradual from fairly early on. They had been shortchanged by the party since
the Partition in 1947. But it hit them like revelation when P.V. Narasimha, the
Congress Prime Minister, watched the demolition of the Babri Masjid in December
1992, inactive and pulverized. The Muslim vote walked out on him. The Congress
came down to its lowest tally of 140 seats in 1996. The Muslim sleep walked
into the parlours of caste parties in UP and Bihar. This is the state of play
when Modi enters the fray in elections 2014.
The RSS had for years been embarked on a
project of “reclaiming” dalits by offering them respectability in the Hindu
order. A story to make my point. Recently, a group for communal harmony in
Kerala placed on the dais two individuals from opposite sides of the Gujarat
2002 pogrom. One was Qutubuddin Ansari who became the iconic image of the
pogrom imploring his attackers to spare him. The other was a sword wielding
young man looking fearsome with a red bandana around his head: his name was
Ashok Mochi. A Mochi means a cobbler. Herein lies a tale.
By giving them frontline roles in
communal conflicts, the Sangh Parivar has dignified Mochis, Khatiks (fruit
sellers), Lohars (blacksmiths), Nayis (barbers), Valmikis (toilet cleaners),
dhobis (laundry washers) in large numbers as Hindutva’s foot soldiers. Amit
Shah has been something of a genius who, by employing this new Hindu infantry, has
altered UP’s political sociology.
By focusing on Mayawati and Mulayam
Singh as Muslim appeasers in an atmosphere of perpetual communal tension, Amit
Shah succeeded in luring dalits and OBCs into the burgeoning Hindu Parivar.
Rather than be taken for granted by the two who were busy concentrating Muslims
electoral support, would dalits and OBC’s not be better off with a dalit Prime
Ministerial candidate? Rather than remain static with Maya and Mulayam, they
would progress with a dynamic Hindu formation.
The challenge for Modi now is to reach
out to a frightened population which has grown accustomed to caste protection
for the past 25 years. The most rudderless, running helter skelter for security,
have been the Muslims.
BJP’s stunning success in the Hindi belt,
Maharashtra and Gujarat, provides a startling contrast to an extraordinarily incompetent
Congress, completely out of touch.
Seldom in the history of modern India
has New Delhi been more bereft of power than it has been during UPA-II.
Elements in the Army, Intelligence Agencies, Senior Judiciary and the
Bureaucracy defied orders under UPA-II. They worked quietly for the new regime
which was expected to take over. If ever the nation was in peril, it was during
UPA-II. It was a laughing stock too everywhere including in influential
diplomatic circles.
Many wondered why Modi was launched into
the campaign as early as June 2013, after the BJP conclave in Goa. In
retrospect, it turned out to be superb strategy. The Congress party, divided
between groups loyal to Sonia Gandhi, the Prime Minister and Rahul Gandhi,
never got together in a serious huddle to chalk out an election strategy. By
the time they reconciled their electoral gameplans, the BJP campaign had
already generated something of a wave. The Congress was demoralized even before
the campaign began.
I had some idea of the spectacular way
in which the Congress was going to lose because I was present at Gandhi family
confidant Sam Pitroda’s interaction with the media at the Foreign
Correspondent’s Club in New Delhi in mid April.
“Sonia Gandhi, Manmohan Singh and Rahul
Gandhi refused to meet the Press even when the opposition campaign consisted
overwhelmingly of media management” Pitroda despaired.
Everytime the bright young hope of the
party, Rahul Gandhi, was consulted, he spoke in parables and confused the
workers with his hair brained schemes for grassroots selection of candidates.
Towards the end of the campaign, the
family, in a state of funk, commandeered Priyanka Gandhi to ensure that mother
and son did not lose in Rae Bareli and Amethi. They held onto the two seats by
the skin of their teeth. Once the campaign ended, Priyanka was back in the
“zenana”. The grand old party has been decimated beyond recognition under Sonia
Gandhi’s watch. Only when it is freed of the dynasty’s stultifying presence will
new seeds sprout before the onset of the coming monsoons.
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Sir, when you refer to the Army defying the UPA, is there any specific instance in mind?
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