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Never mind the future, Indian leaders promise a great past

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By Jawed Naqvi
Monday, 06 Apr, 2009


It’s election time in India and the country’s two largest parties know they have run out of ideas to conjure a great future to woo votes. But they know that even in these times of economic distress and bursting financial bubbles they can target the lowest common denominator with the promise of a great past. There is nothing new about this pursuit. The Congress party periodically takes recourse to its romance with Mahatma Gandhi even if it involves two-timing the great sage with its new found taste for neo-liberal romp.

Offering the counterpoint is the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party or BJP. Never at a loss for outlandish notions of the past that can be accommodated only with considerable falsification of history, the BJP’s election manifesto for the April-May race begins with a virtual Biblical incantation — In The Beginning There Was India — or something to that effect. In fact, the BJP’s notion of India is hard to disassociate with early nationalist obscurantism promoted by its ideological founders. Guru Golwalkar, one of the party’s greatest icons, posited in a book he published in 1939 that the North Pole was once located in India, somewhere on the borders of today’s Bihar state. With passage of time the North Pole shifted to its present location, while the rest of India remained where it is.

An unstated purpose behind fudging what would be otherwise akin to Wagner’s theory of continental drift appears to be a need to justify the location of Indo-Aryans as a people that were eternally rooted in India. Golwalkar’s theory has not been denied or disowned by his followers. It continues to help rationalise the imagined “son of the soil” claims of a few whereby all other groups who came to India later are projected as invaders. Then there is this other strand of historiographers that have influenced and inspired a range of poets and pamphleteers, not the least the BJP itself. Allama Iqbal was not immune to their influences either when he proclaimed that Iran, Egypt and Rome were lesser civilisations compared to India. It’s all a great idea, but little more than that. The Ashokan pillar in Allahabad remains a compelling testimony that blows away the myth of civilisational invincibility. The first inscriptions belonging to Ashoka’s empire were in the form of his edicts, inscribed in Prakrit. That was the Buddhist phase in India. Then emperor Samudragupta added a litany of his conquests in Sanskrit and finally Mughal emperor vandalised the pillar – what other word can we use for what was after all royal graffiti – in Persian.

Within this lot of historiographers are those that claim, for example, that the Taj Mahal was a refurbished ancient temple to Lord Shiva. It would be an engaging banter were this genre of myth-making not to have far-reaching consequences, not always peaceful in nature, inflicted on helpless Indians.

Whether the dispossessed Indian voter revels in the BJP’s version of his past or not, the party makes sure it is writ large enough to induce him forget the present, thereby also the future.

History, according to the BJP, tells us that India was a land of abundance. The country has been blessed with great natural fertility, abundant water and unlimited sunshine. According to foreigners visiting this country, Indians were regarded as the best agriculturists in the world. Records of these travels from the 4th century BC till early-19th century speak volumes about our agricultural abundance, which dazzled the world. The Thanjaur (900-1200 AD) inscriptions and Ramnathapuram (1325 AD) inscriptions record 15 to 20 tonnes per hectare production of paddy.

Now, even after the first green revolution, according to government statistics, Ludhiana in the late-20th century recorded a production of 5.5 tonnes of paddy per hectare. It is, therefore, imperative that India rediscovers an agricultural technology which incorporates all the inputs from our own wisdom and agricultural skills that made us a land of abundance in food.

Indian economy was as flourishing as its agriculture. Foreigners from Magasthenes to Fa-Hian and Hiuen-Tsiang have described and praised Indian material prosperity. Indian villages around 1780 in Bihar have been cited as an example of cleanliness and hospitality. The streets were swept and watered and the people had a remarkable sense of hospitality and attention to accommodate the needs of the travellers. Old British documents established that India was far advanced in the technical and educational fields than Britain of 18th and early-19th century. Its agriculture technically and productively was far superior; it produced a much higher grade of iron and steel.

It has been established beyond doubt, says the BJP, apparently quoting reports on education at the end of the 18th century and the writings of Indian scholars, that not only did India have a functioning indigenous educational system but that it actually compared more than favourably with the system obtaining in England at the time in respect of the number of schools and colleges proportionate to the population, the number of students in schools and colleges, the diligence as well as the intelligence of the students, the quality of the teachers and the financial support provided from private and public sources.

Contrary to the then prevailing opinion, those attending school and college included an impressive percentage of lower caste students, Muslims and girls. “Mahatma Gandhi was absolutely right in saying that India was more illiterate in 1931 compared to its state of literacy 50-60 years ago, i.e. in 1870,” says the BJP. And notice how almost all political parties by now claim Mahatma Gandhi as their hero. However, having heard its proclamations about the nation’s past, one would have thought the BJP would set about offering its thoughts on how we can catch up with our supposedly golden era of yore. A few clues are available in the manifesto. Building a grand temple to Lord Ram at the site of a mosque its supporters razed would be a good first step towards the golden past, hints the BJP. “There is an overwhelming desire of the people in India and abroad to have a grand temple at the birth place of Sri Ram in Ayodhya.”

Abrogating Article 370 in the Indian Constituion, which grants Jammu and Kashmir a special status, would be a major input to usher the elusive golden period. Cancelling plans to construct a shipping channel between Sri Lanka and southern India would be another. “Ram Setu (a mythical bridge the project would otherwise disturb) is our national heritage. Millions want to visit it and it can be developed as a centre of cultural tourism.” Of course, much of India’s ancient spirit can be revived by getting the angry and youthful rabble-rouser Varun Gandhi freed from jail where he was recently locked up for making hate speeches against fellow citizens. It is clear that India is again ready to march forward, into the past, until the next round of polls fall due.
 
sir
There is an overwhelming desire of the people in India and abroad to have a grand temple at the birth place of Sri Ram in Ayodhya

ayodhya is not a plot of 100x100 ..its a city ..temple will be built at another spot ...EVEN THE BJP cant lose votes from muslims ....anyway the ayodhya story is more political than of relegious importance :hitwall:

:cheers:
 
By Jawed Naqvi
Monday, 06 Apr, 2009


It’s election time in India and the country’s two largest parties know they have run out of ideas to conjure a great future to woo votes. But they know that even in these times of economic distress and bursting financial bubbles they can target the lowest common denominator with the promise of a great past. There is nothing new about this pursuit. The Congress party periodically takes recourse to its romance with Mahatma Gandhi even if it involves two-timing the great sage with its new found taste for neo-liberal romp.

Offering the counterpoint is the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party or BJP. Never at a loss for outlandish notions of the past that can be accommodated only with considerable falsification of history, the BJP’s election manifesto for the April-May race begins with a virtual Biblical incantation — In The Beginning There Was India — or something to that effect. In fact, the BJP’s notion of India is hard to disassociate with early nationalist obscurantism promoted by its ideological founders. Guru Golwalkar, one of the party’s greatest icons, posited in a book he published in 1939 that the North Pole was once located in India, somewhere on the borders of today’s Bihar state. With passage of time the North Pole shifted to its present location, while the rest of India remained where it is.

An unstated purpose behind fudging what would be otherwise akin to Wagner’s theory of continental drift appears to be a need to justify the location of Indo-Aryans as a people that were eternally rooted in India. Golwalkar’s theory has not been denied or disowned by his followers. It continues to help rationalise the imagined “son of the soil” claims of a few whereby all other groups who came to India later are projected as invaders. Then there is this other strand of historiographers that have influenced and inspired a range of poets and pamphleteers, not the least the BJP itself. Allama Iqbal was not immune to their influences either when he proclaimed that Iran, Egypt and Rome were lesser civilisations compared to India. It’s all a great idea, but little more than that. The Ashokan pillar in Allahabad remains a compelling testimony that blows away the myth of civilisational invincibility. The first inscriptions belonging to Ashoka’s empire were in the form of his edicts, inscribed in Prakrit. That was the Buddhist phase in India. Then emperor Samudragupta added a litany of his conquests in Sanskrit and finally Mughal emperor vandalised the pillar – what other word can we use for what was after all royal graffiti – in Persian.

Within this lot of historiographers are those that claim, for example, that the Taj Mahal was a refurbished ancient temple to Lord Shiva. It would be an engaging banter were this genre of myth-making not to have far-reaching consequences, not always peaceful in nature, inflicted on helpless Indians.

Whether the dispossessed Indian voter revels in the BJP’s version of his past or not, the party makes sure it is writ large enough to induce him forget the present, thereby also the future.

History, according to the BJP, tells us that India was a land of abundance. The country has been blessed with great natural fertility, abundant water and unlimited sunshine. According to foreigners visiting this country, Indians were regarded as the best agriculturists in the world. Records of these travels from the 4th century BC till early-19th century speak volumes about our agricultural abundance, which dazzled the world. The Thanjaur (900-1200 AD) inscriptions and Ramnathapuram (1325 AD) inscriptions record 15 to 20 tonnes per hectare production of paddy.

Now, even after the first green revolution, according to government statistics, Ludhiana in the late-20th century recorded a production of 5.5 tonnes of paddy per hectare. It is, therefore, imperative that India rediscovers an agricultural technology which incorporates all the inputs from our own wisdom and agricultural skills that made us a land of abundance in food.

Indian economy was as flourishing as its agriculture. Foreigners from Magasthenes to Fa-Hian and Hiuen-Tsiang have described and praised Indian material prosperity. Indian villages around 1780 in Bihar have been cited as an example of cleanliness and hospitality. The streets were swept and watered and the people had a remarkable sense of hospitality and attention to accommodate the needs of the travellers. Old British documents established that India was far advanced in the technical and educational fields than Britain of 18th and early-19th century. Its agriculture technically and productively was far superior; it produced a much higher grade of iron and steel.

It has been established beyond doubt, says the BJP, apparently quoting reports on education at the end of the 18th century and the writings of Indian scholars, that not only did India have a functioning indigenous educational system but that it actually compared more than favourably with the system obtaining in England at the time in respect of the number of schools and colleges proportionate to the population, the number of students in schools and colleges, the diligence as well as the intelligence of the students, the quality of the teachers and the financial support provided from private and public sources.

Contrary to the then prevailing opinion, those attending school and college included an impressive percentage of lower caste students, Muslims and girls. “Mahatma Gandhi was absolutely right in saying that India was more illiterate in 1931 compared to its state of literacy 50-60 years ago, i.e. in 1870,” says the BJP. And notice how almost all political parties by now claim Mahatma Gandhi as their hero. However, having heard its proclamations about the nation’s past, one would have thought the BJP would set about offering its thoughts on how we can catch up with our supposedly golden era of yore. A few clues are available in the manifesto. Building a grand temple to Lord Ram at the site of a mosque its supporters razed would be a good first step towards the golden past, hints the BJP. “There is an overwhelming desire of the people in India and abroad to have a grand temple at the birth place of Sri Ram in Ayodhya.”

Abrogating Article 370 in the Indian Constituion, which grants Jammu and Kashmir a special status, would be a major input to usher the elusive golden period. Cancelling plans to construct a shipping channel between Sri Lanka and southern India would be another. “Ram Setu (a mythical bridge the project would otherwise disturb) is our national heritage. Millions want to visit it and it can be developed as a centre of cultural tourism.” Of course, much of India’s ancient spirit can be revived by getting the angry and youthful rabble-rouser Varun Gandhi freed from jail where he was recently locked up for making hate speeches against fellow citizens. It is clear that India is again ready to march forward, into the past, until the next round of polls fall due.

Neo sir,

the article you have posted is not false but it is biased .....the auther has only taken some of the points which suits him and is not the real picture...

I will like to post summary of BJP manifesto which is having better vision of future than congress.....

Election Manifesto - 2009: Highlights



DETERMINED LEADER, DECISIVE GOVERNMENT
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY and HIGHLIGHTS


PUTTING POOR FIRST:

1. All BPL families to get 35kg of rice or wheat every month at Rs 2 per kg. This will be available against Food Coupons redeemable both at PDS and private outlets.
2. Ensure farm loans at a maximum interest rate of 4 percent.
3. Waive agricultural loans.
4. Introduce a Farm Income Insurance Scheme through which both price and produce will be insured
5. Irrigate 35 million hectares of additional farmland within 5 years.
6. Initiate special schemes for the urban poor, such as loans at 4 percent interest to poor vendors.
7. Set up a “Workers Bank” to provide a safety net for unorganized sector workers.
8. Revise minimum wages and ensure strict implementation of the Wages Act.

ECONOMY GROWS, INDIA PROSPERS

1. Generate employment through massive public spending on infrastructure projects. Complete the implementation of Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s dream projects: National Highway Development Project by building 15-20 km of new highways every day; and Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana, to link all villages with over 500 people by all-weather road.
2. Introduce schemes to encourage private industry and services sectors. Ensure a low tax, low interest rate regime.
3. Exempt personal Income Tax for those earning up to Rs 3 lakh per annum. For women and Senior Citizens, the exemption will be Rs 3.5 lakh per annum. This will benefit over 3.5 crore people.
4. Complete exemption for interest income on bank deposits for all other than corporates and those who have business income.
5. Scrap Fringe Benefit Tax (FBT), which is a source of harassment to employees and employers alike.
6. Abolish CST and fix a ceiling of 12-14 percent on GST.
7. Ensure watertight monitoring of regulatory bodies so that the public is secured from companies indulging in fraudulent practices in the stock markets.
8. Construct 10,00,000 housing for the poor units every year; kick-start the real estate sector that is suffering at present. Bring down interest on housing loans to make urban housing affordable.
9. Take firm steps to identify and retrieve Indian money stashed away in foreign banks. Estimated at Rs. 25 lakh crore-Rs. 75 lakh crore, getting this amount back through international cooperation will be enough to complete road and power connectivity throughout the country; ensure setting up of quality schools in all villages. This quantum of black money, if recovered, will amount to allocating Rs 4 crore to every Indian village to improve living conditions in the countryside.
10. Boost tourism sector: Identify 50 destinations and develop infrastructure, connectivity. Double foreign tourist arrivals in 5 years to help generate employment in hospitality industry.
11. Ban on foreign direct investment (FDI) in retail sector to help domestic retail trade.

WAR AGAINST ENEMIES WITHIN AND WITHOUT

1. BJP’s robust commitment to securing the nation against its enemies is well known. Our first priority will be to take stern steps against terrorists, cross-border or home-grown. An improved POTA-type law will be introduced. The intelligence mechanism shall be overhauled. India’s 4000-km long coastline will be fully protected by enhanced naval security.
2. We will systematically detect, detain and deport illegal immigrants who have emerged as a major source of homegrown terror. Fencing of the India-Bangladesh border, deliberately neglected by the UPA in pursuit of vote bank politics, will be speedily completed.
3. Use coercive diplomacy to isolate and compel countries engaging in exporting terror across the border to stop their misadventure. Ensure that the foreign tap of separatist groups in India is completely turned off.
4. Wage a relentless war against Maoist groups throughout the country using the highly successful and popular Chhattisgarh model.
5. Introduce a comprehensive National Identity Card for all citizens of India.



JAI JAWAN IN ACTION

1. All members of the armed forces and the para-military shall be exempted from payment of Income Tax. This will benefit nearly 20 lakh people.
2. Take steps to set up a separate Pay Commission for the armed forces. Also revisit the existing pay structure to ensure a better deal.
3. Implement one-rank-one-pension.
4. Push State Governments to introduce better schemes for the rehabilitation of ex-servicemen and explore avenues for resettling them with gainful employment.

ENERGY SAVED, ENERGY GAINED:

1. Generate an additional 120,000 MW of electricity in 5 years through speedy conclusion of ongoing projects while sanctioning new power plants. 20% of this will be through harnessing non-conventional energy sources.
2. Reduce dependence on imported fossil fuels by promoting renewable energy options such as run-on-river electricity projects, solar, wind power and biomass.
3. Secure energy needs through aggressive diplomatic and commercial moves in oil-producing countries.

WOMEN EMPOWERED, NATION STRENGTHENED

1. Introduce the Madhya Pradesh BJP Government’s highly successful ‘Ladli Lakshmi’ Scheme throughout India to directly transfer funds to the school going girl child to encourage education and secure economic self-sufficiency for young women. Rs. 1.18 lakh after completion of 12th standard.
2. Pave the way for nationwide implementation of the Bhamashah Scheme proposed by the erstwhile BJP Government in Rajasthan to directly pay Rs 1,500 to open a bank account for every adult woman, to be accessed by biometric cards usable through fingerprint.
3. Provide bicycles to every school going girl child from BPL families throughout India.
4. Introduce special schemes to promote entrepreneurship among rural women through Self-help Groups (SHGs).
5. BJP remains committed to bring about 33 percent reservation for women in legislatures and will endeavour to introduce it at the earliest.
6. Salaries of 28 lakh Anganwadi workers and helpers, who are the backbone of the Integrated Child Development Scheme (ICDS) will be doubled.
7. BJP believes all sections of Indian women cannot be fully empowered without the enactment of a Uniform Civil Code as decreed in the Directive Principles of the Constitution and emphasized repeatedly by the Supreme Court. The party remains committed to implementing such a code after discussions with all sections of opinion.

YOUNG INDIA, NATION’S PILLAR

1. UPA has nurtured despair, frustration and joblessness among India’s young people who account for 50 percent of the population. BJP will regenerate hope through massive vocational training programmes and job creation schemes both in rural and urban areas.
2. A network of National Knowledge Incubation Centres will be set up throughout the country to identify and groom young talent for every sector of the economy.
3. Study loans will be made cheaper and more accessible by fixing student loan interest at 4%.
4. BJP will create 12 million IT-enabled jobs in rural areas. Computer prices will be drastically cut to make it affordable to every section. All educational institutions will have internet facilities within 5 years. Broadband connectivity to every village.
5. Special provisions will be made for SC/ST/OBC and other underprivileged sections of the youth for skill development with focus on web-based training.
6. Launch an aggressive project to groom young sporting talent by allocating Rs 5,000 crore for creation of sports infrastructure especially in educational institutions Appoint trained coaches; secure employment for international medal winners. Sport will be a compulsory subject in school curricula.


NATION’S WEALTH, PEOPLE’S HEALTH

1. BJP is committed to making the right to clean water a fundamental right. A massive programme will be launched to provide clean, drinking water to every citizen.
2. A regulatory authority to be set up for private hospitals and nursing homes to monitor unfair practices.
3. A comprehensive project to bring health-for-all by 2014.
4. Introduce a mandatory ‘Dial 108 for ambulance at your doorstep’ scheme throughout the country.
5. Revive the creation of new AIIMS, originally initiated by the NDA Government but neglected by UPA. All six state-of-the-art hospitals will be rapidly constructed over the next 5 years.
6. Janani Suraksha Yojana to care for delivering mothers and infants will be strengthened.
7. Investment will be made to promote alternative medicine such as Ayurveda, Yoga, Unani etc.
8. Population stabilization holds the key to India’s prosperity. BJP will introduce schemes in consultation with different sections to expedite serious progress in this direction.

PRIVILEGING THE UNDERPRIVILEGED:

1. BJP is deeply committed to creating a society of equal opportunities with Justice for All as its credo. Its State Governments have introduced a series of schemes for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Minorities – especially in education, job training, poverty alleviation and promotion of entrepreneurial talent. These schemes will be improved upon and the most successful among them replicated nationally. In addition, people living in backward regions, particularly in the North-East, inaccessible forests and hilly areas will be prioritized.

2. Education and Job quota will be introduced for economically backward sections of society other than SCs, STs and OBCs, for whom reservations will continue.


SENIOR CITIZENS:

1. Recognising the importance of Senior Citizens in nation-building and inculcating civilisational values, BJP commits itself to reducing the age for receiving travel benefits from 65 to 60 years.
2. Complete tax exemption to senior citizens in respect of pension income.

CREATING THE RIGHT ENVIRONMENT:

1. Combating climate change and global warming through non-polluting technologies will be prioritized.
2. Importance given to programmes to arrest the melting of Himalayan glaciers from which most major rivers in North India originate.
3. Protect and promote forests and afforestation.
4. Take all appropriate steps to save Tiger, the National Animal, and safeguard critical habitants of all wildlife. Emphasis to be laid on protecting India’s resplendent but endangered bio-diversity.

DEFENDING THE CIVILISATION

1. The BJP remains committed to the construction of a grand Ram Mandir at Ayodhya.
2. BJP will not allow anybody to touch the revered Ram Setu. We will evolve a new route for Sethu Samudram bypassing Ram Setu.
3. Cleaning the revered Ganga and other major rivers will be a priority. Local communities will be enrolled in this gigantic task.
4. Cow protection is an article of faith with BJP. This will be pursued relentlessly.
5. Full integration of the nation is not possible as long as Article 370 stays on the statute books. BJP remains steadfast in its belief that the provision must be removed to ensure Indian unity.
 
Jawed Naqvi likes to criticize the BJP but he deliberately sees only one side of the story.

In Gujarat, there are many instances of Muslims voting for BJP, where Narendra Modi is working an economic miracle. Drinking water, schools, education for the girl child, improved agricultural productivity, 24 hour power in all villages, broadband connectivity in all villages, good quality roads in rural areas, industrial development, it's all happening in Gujarat. Yes, some Muslims have suffered in the riots (as did some Hindus), and that is a shame, but Muslims have also benefited in many other ways.

On the other hand the so called secular parties are in bed with the worst type of Islamists. Congress is allied in UP with an Islamist gentleman who had announced a reward for anybody who would kill George Bush. Communists are allied in Kerela with a well-known hard-core terrorist Madhani.
 
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Jawed Naqvi likes to criticize the BJP but he deliberately sees only one side of the story.

In Gujarat, there are many instances of Muslims are voting for BJP, where Narendra Modi is working an economic miracle. Drinking water, schools, education for the girl child, improved agricultural productivity, 24 hour power in all villages, broadband connectivity in all villages, good quality roads in rural areas, industrial development, it's all happening in Gujarat. Yes, some Muslims have suffered in the riots (as did some Hindus), and that is a shame, but Muslims have also benefited in many other ways.

On the other hand the so called secular parties are in bed with the worst type of Islamists. Congress is allied in UP with an Islamist gentleman who had announced a reward for anybody who would kill George Bush. Communists are allied in Kerela with a well-known hard-core terrorist Madhani.

you are absolutely right

naredra modi is a gem ofa politician he does any thing for the development of his state ....outlook had an article about him he will be awake till 10 30 in the night and discuss with industrialists about their plans for the state ,he is single ,motivated ..what more do you want from a politician..he has no one to make crores of rupees ...really a dedicated person:enjoy:

:cheers:
 
Why should the muslims in hindu majority areas vote for BJP????

No logic in this....

Your surpise seems to suggest that Indians vote only on communal lines. Doesn't the BJP put up non hindu candidates ?

I know of pockets in UP & NCR where entire muslim colonies / regions vote BJP simply for the work done by existing BJP MLA, Councillors or MPs of the region.

While communalism exists so does the educated voter.
 

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