Cow Urine In Congress Manifesto: Hinduism Bar Raised
Sky High
Saeed Naqvi
In a letter to
her father written on December 10, 1949, Indira Gandhi threatened that she
would be provoked to call herself “Zohra Begum”. Her defiance was in
retaliation to senior Congress leader, Purushotam Das Tandon’s project of
renaming names of places.
The occasion
for the letter was Prime Minister Nehru’s visit to Farrukhabad, a place Tandon
was keen to rename. Rather than changing names totally, Tandon recommended a
gradual approach. All cities, towns, villages ending in “bad”, a Persian suffix
(Mammudabad, Moradabad, Allahabad and so on) should end in “nagar”. In Tandon’s
framework it would have been Allanagar. Prayagnagar would have involved total erasure,
leaving no trace of Allahabad. Tandon’s was a step by step assertion of the new
Hindu state. When he met resistance on this score from Nehru (and none other) he
went all out on bigger issue like the national language – Devangari script and
Sanskritized Hindi. Even Mahatma Gandhi had suggested “Hindustani”. That he had
a following within the Congress became clear when he became President of the
Congress in 1950 in direct opposition to Nehru’s wishes. Nehru may have
prevailed eventually but not before Mahatma Gandhi had given Tandon the title –
Rajrishi, the sage of the kingdom.
Narendra Modi,
in his very first speech in Parliament in May 2014, said something which would
have struck a chord with Tandon, indeed with a large segment of Hindus including
a majority of Congressmen who nurtured the truth but only silently under some
unstated party discipline. Modi said the country had to be freed from “1200
(twelve hundred) years of “ghulami” or subjugation. It was a historic
statement, transformational in its intent. Never had a leader, leave alone a
Prime Minister, referred to the “Muslim period” as foreign rule.
It was the
beginning of Modi’s innings and one would have expected alert pundits to pick
up every inflection and nuance. But no one did. Presumably because Modi had
said what most of them believed in their deep heart’s core. Pardon me quoting
Ghalib again:
“Dekhna
taqreer ki lazzat ki jo usne kaha,
Mainey yeh
jaana ki goya yeh bhi mere dil mein hai"
(Look at the wondrous
flavour of his speech,
Whatever he
says echoes thoughts that were in the recesses of my heart)
In other
words, Modi had articulated what guilt ridden Congressmen never had the courage
to say openly. Composite culture was attractive when it remained composed in a
well preserved frame. After the fracture of 1947, it was destined to dither,
decompose, decay. Terms of endearment had to change.
When the lynch
mob in Haryana forced two Muslim boys to swallow a paste of cow dung and urine,
they vomited. When I told this story to Murli Manohar Joshi, always civilized
in his extremism, he looked at me stoically.
“The boys
vomited because they did not know the medicinal qualities of “gobar” (dung) and
cow urine” he said in a matter of fact way. “For certain kinds of fever my
mother used to make me swallow tablets of fresh gobar.” It was not a story to
be disregarded. In fact it opened my mind to accept with equanimity dietary
rituals which have had a subterranean sanctity for heaven knows how many years,
centuries, millennia. My yoga teacher has memories of cow’s urine keeping him
warm in Bihar’s harsh winters. Having become shock proof, I did not bat an
eyelid when my cook and cricket companion, a Brahmin to boot, listed a series
of rituals which would be incomplete without atleast token consumption of the
stuff. Two litres of cow’s urine is part of Congress leader and former Madhya
Pradesh Chief Minister Digvijay Singh daily diet.
Little wonder
Singh, Kamal Nath and Jyotiraditya Scindia, gave pride of place to commercial
production of cow’s urine in the Congress manifesto which they released to the
press in Bhopal the other day. To ensure abundant supply, gaushalas or cow
shelters will be opened in every Panchayat.
Large scale
revival of an ancient drink will clearly require an entrepreneur with the
genius of Varghese Kurien, the founder of Amul. When I saw videos on social
media of dedicated consumers using palms of their hands as cups to drink
directly from the source, I had my misgivings. I thought this was the usual fake
news trying to denigrate Hinduism. Little did I know that they were promotional
videos. Or, atleast that is the way they come across to me now that the truth
has been placed before me at the historic press conference in Bhopal.
It is now
clear as daylight that should the Congress win in Madhya Pradesh, and is as
good as its word, bottled cow urine has a good chance of driving out other
colas from the market, particularly if mahants and sadhus approve a variety of
flavours to dilute the pristine purity of the original.
Congress
President Rahul Gandhi will then have to take a call: should he or should he
not? If the Congress comes up trumps in MP, it will become difficult for him to
discard the beverage for the 2019 campaign. In fact it might be electorally
useful for him to imbibe the stuff in full public glare. He will break records
in global publicity if he can have a battery of TV cameras zoom on a janeudhari
(one with the sacred thread) Congress President drink directly from the source.
He has already set the bar of Hindu credentials so high by his
Kailash-Mansarovar yatra and frenetic temple hopping, as to leave Modi panting
far behind.
The real
obstacle in the way of Rahul Gandhi leading a credible Hindu party is his
ancestry, the popular suspicion that he may have in his genes his great
grandfather Nehru’s secular distortions or his grandmother Indira Gandhi’s impulsive
threat to rename herself Zohra Begum if Farrukhabad becomes Farrukhnagar. His
promotion of cow urine as the national beverage will distance him light years
away from both.
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