The
Itinerant Prime Minister Yet To Visit A Muslim Country
Saeed Naqvi
Measuring a government’s achievements in
its first year has to be inherently speculative. But some things can be put
down to Narendra Modi’s account with a degree of certainty. He has in his first
year as Prime Minister, never worn a Muslim cap although it is difficult to
identify a cap of that denominational description.
Time was when a dopalli topi or a white
muslin cap was standard headgear among Hindus and Muslims alike. In winters,
muslin gave way to wool. A variety of headgear was on exhibition at Prime
Ministerial Iftar parties, a standard Congress fare, but which mushroomed in
direct proportion to Congress decline.
Mulayam Singh Yadav, an equally eager
Muslim vote hunter, went on an Iftar feeding spree too, wearing funny hats. But
he also struck a high cultural note to accentuate his secular identity. So far
political leaders had mobilized the clergy from Deoband, Imam Bukhari of Jama
Masjid and sundry Mullahs as potential vote gatherers. Mulayam Singh was
persuaded that Muslims along with a religious identity, also had a cultural
dimension. They were, in other words, amicable to charms of Urdu poetry as
well.
It turns out that in UP there is an Urdu
poet buried behind every culvert. In the contemporary era there have been some
very famous poets. Someone mentioned the name of Josh Malihabadi. But he had
blotted his copy by going over to Pakistan where Faiz Ahmad Faiz beat him
hollow in the popularity stakes. Next in status would have been Firaq
Gorakhpuri. But his full name was Raghupati Sahai. Mulayam asked shrewdly: how
would that affect voters?
Jigar Moradabadi, Majrooh Sultanpuri,
Shakeel Badayuni, Ali Sardar Jafri (Balrampur) and, the greatest of them all,
Majaz Lucknowi, were all within hailing distance of Mulayam Singh. But they all
suffered from one handicap: they had no lobbies to promote their candidature.
In this respect, Kaifi Azmi was doubly
blessed. His daughter, the distinguished actor, Shabana Azmi and lyricist and
poet, Javed Akhtar, worked on Mulayam’s aesthetic aspirations with great
diligence. There is no Indian poet in any language who has a railway train
named after him: Kaifi does. There is a Kaifiat Express to Azamgarh where in
Mijwan village, a girl’s school and haveli have been resurrected in his name.
This is not all. All India Kaifi Azmi Academy has been opened in Lucknow in
service of Urdu, with generous cash replenishments from the state.
Mulayam Singh’s single minded patronage
of Kaifi Azmi does serve the cause of Urdu, which must be welcome. But it
surely cannot be anybody’s case that in Lucknow, the city of Urdu’s greatest
masters, all iconography must be focused on Kaifi Azmi alone, a remarkable poet
though he was.
Excepting a flair for sartorial colour
combinations, Modi has in his first year not demonstrated a sensitivity to
aesthetics. Muslims associated with him, Najma Heptullah, Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi
and Zafar Sareshwala, have all been assigned to maintain some kind of paddocks
for Muslims. Heptullah and Naqvi are senior and junior ministers for Minority
Affairs and Sareshwala a newly appointed Chancellor of Maulana Azad National
Urdu University in Hyderabad.
Modi is giving out two signals: in my
generous, “genuine” secularism I have three outlets for minorities. There is a
second and more important message: away from the mainstream, there are separate
watering holes for Muslims. Does it not smack of apartheid? A ministry for
minorities is in any case a retrogressive idea in a secular state. And if you
must have such a ministry, it would seem more wholesome in enlightened Hindu
hands. That would have been more integrationist.
The conceptual framework in which Modi
sees Muslims became clear in his very first speech in Parliament after being
sworn in as Prime Minister: he talked of “1,200 years of ghulami” or servitude.
In other words he sees the entire Muslim period as one of “ghulami”. This is
direct, blunt and possibly hurtful but at a wide variance from the Nehruvian
construct about only 200 years of British rule being foreign. The professional
secularist ofcourse glosses over this one in tactful silence, which is another
way of telling a lie. This is one of the unsettled questions of the Indian
condition after Partition.
How this appraisal of history plays on
Modi’s neighbourhood policy has yet to be seen. His very hectic foreign
itinerary has some very revealing gaps.
For a Prime Minister who has undertaken
more foreign travel than any in his first year, Modi probably holds an
unnoticed record: he has not yet visited a Muslim country. He even refused to
attend the 60th anniversary of the Bandung conference on April 22
attended by statesmen like China’s Xi Jinping. Indonesian President Joko Widodo
tried to contact Modi on the phone but could not. Whether he was avoiding
Jakarta, Capital of world’s largest Muslim country or discarding a Nehru trail
remains unclear.
An outstanding success story for India
in foreign policy terms happens to be Sheikh Haseena in Bangladesh. Will Modi
break his taboo on travel to Muslim countries by an early visit to Dhaka?
There obviously is a new, secretive
style being enunciated in South Block of which itineraries are only a glaring
part. It would therefore be premature to arrive at conclusions even on the
basis of Modi’s travels and the Sangh Parivar’s known stance on minority
issues. Who knows what script has been thought through on the BJP-PDP
arrangement in Jammu and Kashmir which has been managed with skillful patience
and care so far. All these are salient features in his first year.
#
#
# #
No comments:
Post a Comment