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Re-Naming Akbar Road as Maharana Pratap Singh Road Is About Politics and Hindutva

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Re-Naming Akbar Road Is About Politics and Hindutva
BYGOPALKRISHNA GANDHION19/05/20161 COMMENT
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This re-naming fever is about soft warfare, cultural politics.

Posters of Maharana Pratab on the signboards on Akbar Road. Credit: Twitter

General Vijay Kumar Singh is a soldier and a Rajput. He has in abundance a soldier’s perseverance and a Rajput’s pride. A soldier is expected by training to do his duty unflinchingly, a Rajput is expected by custom to speed to battle in a cloud of dust and determination, returning only if victorious.

A general must retire when the time comes for him to do so. V. K. Singh has retired from the Indian Army. But no Rajput retires from being a Rajput. Singh is a Rajput forever.

The former army chief’s wish to have New Delhi’s Akbar Road re-named as Maharana Pratap Singh Road has to be seen as a retired soldier’s fascination for military history and an un-retirable Rajput’s untiring Rajput chromosomes.

No one can fault a lion for roaring.

With no war declared, no one bugling him to battle, Singh’s instincts and training have made him turn from the solatiums of the present to the stimulations of the past. He has created a diorama of the battle fought four hundred and forty years ago at Haldighati between Maharana Pratap Singh and Akbar’s army commander Man Singh. There is true passion in the box-scenes, true nostalgia, true kinship. To the former general from the Rajput Regiment, I offer a salute for his miniaturisations of soldierly courage and a khamaghani for the magnifications of Rajput pride.

But the matter cannot be left there. His recommendation has been made as a minister. To another minister. And that, in an official letter. With that the idea goes beyond the cloisters of an individual’s imagining to the chambers of public office. It makes the suggestion a communication of a minister’s idea, made by him as minister, to another minister who is thought by the ‘sending’ minister to be the right ‘receiving’ minister for that minister’s ministerial action. All this anoints the recommendation with the governmental equivalent of rose-water, which is, the official ink.

Unless withdrawn by him or officially disowned by the union government, his recommendation cannot be taken as an individual’s stray thoughts. It has to be seen as a reflection, howsoever individualised, of this government’s ideological gradient, its historical mount, its political axle.

And those are patent enough.

Hindutva

B.R. Ambedkar gave a now famous message to the All India Depressed Classes Conference at Nagpur in 1942 – Agitate, Educate, Organise. That can be re-worked in Hindutva’s vocabulary as ‘Regurgitate, Resuscitate, Polarise’. Regurgitate old prejudices, resuscitate dying biases, polarise communities. Of these, the first two are about methods, the third is about policy. And the policy is to polarise India first, on religious lines as between Hindus and Muslims and then, on thinking lines as between those who want India to be plural and those who want it to be Hindu-dominated, between those who want India to be liberal and those who want it to be tersely majoritarian. In other words, polarising India between India that is Bharat and India that is Bharatiya, between India that is Hind and an India that is Hindu.

The re-naming of Aurangzeb Road as A. P. J. Abdul Kalam Road had little to do with Aurangzeb. It had less to do with Kalam. It had everything to do with polarising, with wanting to turn the knife in India’s Hindu-Muslim duality. It had little to do with history and everything to do with politics. It had little to do with social memory and everything to do with communal manipulation. It was about regurgitating memories of Mughal bigotry, resuscitating ‘Aurangzeb the Bad’ and, above all, polarising Bharat and Hind.

Aurangzeb Road was renamed A. P. J. Abdul Kalam Road, ‘Bad’ Muslim to ‘Good’ Muslim, with a hidden snigger. The call for turning Akbar Road into Maharana Pratap Singh Road, great Muslim to great Hindu, is being made with an open sneer. The first re-naming idea was clever, this one is morbid. The first caused a gasp of astonishment, this stifles the breath of belief.

Akbar

Akbar is ‘Akbar the Great’ not because he was a great Mughal but because he was, simply, exceptional. In his use of power for creating a nation unified by a moral direction, Akbar ranks with Ashoka and with Ashoka alone. Not just the Hindustan he ruled but the India of subsequent centuries has recognised him as one who “died as he had lived for many years, a man whose religion nobody could name” – an ideal condition for the ruler of a country with many religious traditions. Akbar stands at a rare intersection of scholarly esteem and popular endorsement as a figure of national convergence.

His urbane treatment of India’s Hindu majority including his marrying Hindu princesses, doing away with the outrageous pilgrim tax and the appointment of Hindus to the highest possible military and civilian commands can be interpreted as acts of political canniness as indeed they were. But his extension of the same civility to Jains, Parsis and Christians has to have had inner roots in eclecticism. If the Din-i-Ilahi stabilised his throne and burnished his personal image, it also becalmed the country.

Akbar sought to build trust. He tried to win and retain the confidence of his people in his impartiality, his justice. Ashoka erected pillars and carved edicts across his empire to proclaim the Dhamma; Akbar built the Ibadat Khana (House of Worship) in his gardens at Sikri to be used as a discussion hall to debate, in a free and enquiring spirit, questions of religion and theology.

Does Singh not know this? Of course he does. But then he is captive, captive to the ideology of his political party.

Why, four and a half centuries on, should Akbar’s name on a road make him want to erase it? Is pluralism threatening? Is debate unwelcome? Is civility shown by a Muslim a challenge?

Or has it become necessary, urgently necessary now, to further Hindutva consolidation, and here through the great veins of Rajput self-pride?

The answer is patent.

Hindu consolidation

The minister could have asked for a brand new building, flyover or a road to be named after the lion-hearted Maharana Pratap Singh of Mewar. I do not know if Mansingh Road is named after Akbar’s commander or another of the same name. If the former, that name could in some logic though in bad form, have been sought to be renamed but that would not have satisfied their Hindutva. Replacing Akbar’s name on the New Delhi road by that of Akbar’s brave adversary, does. It does so by staging a proxy Haldighati, a diorama battle in which the great Mughal becomes ‘the oppressor’ and the great Rana the liberator, the great Mughal becomes the Muslim and the great Rana becomes the Hindu. It continues Hindutva’s plan to un-ravel, strand by strand, the great weave of India’s pluralism. It continues the self-deluding and India-defeating agenda of Hindu consolidation.

It is not about the person any more. It is about the religion.

Babur Road, Humayun Road, Akbar Road, Jehangir Road, Shahjahan Road have all been placed by road re-namers on a death row. They will all have Maharana Pratap equivalents. Ashoka Road will be a harder case. Unless of course someone suggests that it be re-named Kalinga Marg.

Supporting Singh’s recommendation, a BJP spokesperson has said that road names such as Akbar Road’s should go because they represent India’s oppressors. Imagine, she said, Israel having a road named after Hitler. One can be sure that from ‘the other side’, there will be equally intemperate and ill-tempered howls of protest comparing Hindus to the Nazis, Indian Muslims to the Jewish victims of the second world war.

The re-namings do not have to be done, as they say, ‘actually’. It is enough for purposes of consolidation that they be recommended. Twist the lime-drop into the milk and wait for it to curdle. The khoya can take its own time. And so, suggest, suggest, recommend, recommend. And do nothing more. Sit back and let ‘them’ fight. The next re-naming tranche could be recommended for places – Allahabad, Aurangabad, Ahmedabad, Hyderabad, Secunderabad, Nizamabad, Shahjahanabad, Faizabad, Ahmednagar, Fatehpur… And then for cultural signets. Soft power is a phrase of dubious distinction used for another gambit of suspicious intent, cultural diplomacy. This re-naming fever is about soft warfare, cultural politics. If, in Pakistan and elsewhere the beautiful Khuda Hafiz has been sought to be replaced by Allah Hafiz, Hindutva will want to and try to replace Jai Hind! By Bharat Mata ki Jai!. And the simple Namaste with Jai Sri Krishna! to be responded, do not forget, by Radhe! Radhe ! But that will be tough, in Tamil Nadu certainly where, thanks to Periyar and the Dravidar movement, speakers of that classical language, despite all their piety, will not countenance replacing Vanakkam with Jai this or that deity.

Rend, rend, that which time has stitched; tear , tear what time has darned. And cut, cut what has stayed whole. This is what Muslim bigotry and Hindu consolidation are about.

Sare Jahan Se Achcha

Sadly, however, for the zealots, and fortunately for India, its people, forHum Bharat Ke LogorHum Hind Ki Awam, are just that many, that many too many, and too many too sensible, to be bamboozled by the cultural demagoguery, political roguery and emotional thuggery. We do not want to be good or bad Muslims, good or bad Hindus. We just want to be fortunate citizens, fortunate in the intentions of our rulers, fortunate in their wisdom not their cleverness, in the honesty of their hands not the smartness of their fingers. Our rulers cannot be Ashoka or Akbar. But they can try to be their heirs. Nehru did, Ambedkar did. What did they re-name ? Nothing, certainly not India. They kept that name, adding to it a grand synonym, Bharat. And that is what Rakesh Sharma celebrated, I am sure, when gazing down at the Time-carved peninsula of India from his sky-seat, he answered Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s question of how India looked from ‘up there’, with ‘Sare Jahan Se Achcha’.

Today’s rulers, in their mundane seat of brief office can never, howsoever hard they may try, ever hope to erase the shape of Hindustan from the name and style India that is Bharat.


http://thewire.in/2016/05/19/re-naming-akbar-road-is-about-politics-and-hindutva-37152/
 
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I am fine with the names of zealots like Aurangzeb being deleted from roads and cities. The rest is all pandering to local votebanks - Shiv Sena / BJP renamed Bombay as Mumbai but Aurangabad remains unrenamed. Why? It is absurd as Bombay is predominantly a British city - from the roundabouts at Kings Circle to the gargoyles at the BMC office to the architecture of Ballard Estate - the whole vibe is European. Still, a predominantly European city is renamed to pander to a votebank.
 
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This is utterly stupid, Instead of Renaming akbar road to Maha Rana Pratap, Build 20 more Highways and name all of them Maha rana pratap or which ever History figure Congress neglected.

The renaming business is utterly useless, when the focus should be on good governance and development. Gen V.K Singh should have instead taken up the recovery vehicle and Tatra Vectra up which would have helped restructuring the MoD Corruption.
 
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This is utterly stupid, Instead of Renaming akbar road to Maha Rana Pratap, Build 20 more Highways and name all of them Maha rana pratap or which ever History figure Congress neglected.

The renaming business is utterly useless, when the focus should be on good governance and development. Gen V.K Singh should have instead taken up the recovery vehicle and Tatra Vectra up which would have helped restructuring the MoD Corruption.

We will build them too but we will name them Ahom Highway!
 
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This is utterly stupid, Instead of Renaming akbar road to Maha Rana Pratap, Build 20 more Highways and name all of them Maha rana pratap or which ever History figure Congress neglected.

The renaming business is utterly useless, when the focus should be on good governance and development. Gen V.K Singh should have instead taken up the recovery vehicle and Tatra Vectra up which would have helped restructuring the MoD Corruption.

I find it utterly stupid to name a prime road in Delhi after an ILLITERATE Rapist slave owner mass murdering Alcoholic drug abusing pervert who's was instrumental in destroying Indian civilization. (its Akbar in case you still have not figured it out)

Why should roads in delhi be named after such a man ?

By convention National Highways are not given names, they are given numbers.

The Renaming business brings focus and debate back to the TRUE history of India and frees it from the clutches of Leftist "secular" historians. It is a most worthy cause.

It is a scandal how we have hijacked our true heroes with invaders and glorified them.
 
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General Vijay Kumar Singh is a soldier and a Rajput. He has in abundance a soldier’s perseverance and a Rajput’s pride. A soldier is expected by training to do his duty unflinchingly, a Rajput is expected by custom to speed to battle in a cloud of dust and determination, returning only if victorious.

A general must retire when the time comes for him to do so. V. K. Singh has retired from the Indian Army. But no Rajput retires from being a Rajput. Singh is a Rajput forever.

The former army chief’s wish to have New Delhi’s Akbar Road re-named as Maharana Pratap Singh Road has to be seen as a retired soldier’s fascination for military history and an un-retirable Rajput’s untiring Rajput chromosomes.

There is a reason why Akbar is called the Great. For all his mistakes in his youth, he became a benevolent emperor in his later years. Ashoka was perhaps more brutal than Akbar, and so was Alexander.
Akbar is a person whose diversity we should celebrate.

And I take offence to the highlighted part. For all their valour in battle, we all knew how Rajputs lived and survived among themselves. Lies, stabbing each other's back, giving their women's in marriage to Mughal emperor to have gain prevalence. Only if they had united, no such confusions such as naming of roads could have ever taken place. Rajputs were good soldiers, but leaders? No.
And VK Singh has proved to be a disappointment as a minister. Only few soldiers or generals can adapt sucessfully in politics and VKS isnt one.
 
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I find it utterly stupid to name a prime road in Delhi after an ILLITERATE Rapist slave owner mass murdering Alcoholic drug abusing pervert who's was instrumental in destroying Indian civilization. (its Akbar in case you still have not figured it out)

Why should roads in delhi be named after such a man ?

By convention National Highways are not given names, they are given numbers.

The Renaming business brings focus and debate back to the TRUE history of India and frees it from the clutches of Leftist "secular" historians. It is a most worthy cause.

It is a scandal how we have hijacked our true heroes with invaders and glorified them.
there are more important things to deal with right now than to deal with history. You grew up in India, your sense of history still seems right, you neither buy leftist history nor have forgotten the real heroes. This is the time to put corrupt people in jail rather than renaming streets, provide people decent jobs and a congress mukt bharat. Road naming business can happen later.

There is a reason why Akbar is called the Great. For all his mistakes in his youth, he became a benevolent emperor in his later years. Ashoka was perhaps more brutal than Akbar, and so was Alexander.
Akbar is a person whose diversity we should celebrate.

And I take offence to the highlighted part. For all their valour in battle, we all knew how Rajputs lived and survived among themselves. Lies, stabbing each other's back, giving their women's in marriage to Mughal emperor to have gain prevalence. Only if they had united, no such confusions such as naming of roads could have ever taken place. Rajputs were good soldiers, but leaders? No.
And VK Singh has proved to be a disappointment as a minister. Only few soldiers or generals can adapt sucessfully in politics and VKS isnt one.
You know I have always been surprised that Hemchandra Vikramaditya doesn't find mention in India, he was a incredible.
 
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This is stupid. For all issues, Akbar still was a decent ruler.

I'd rather have Allahabad renamed back to its civilizational and original name.

And Aurangabad too but primarily Allahabad should be priority number 1.
 
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there are more important things to deal with right now than to deal with history. You grew up in India, your sense of history still seems right, you neither buy leftist history nor have forgotten the real heroes. This is the time to put corrupt people in jail rather than renaming streets, provide people decent jobs and a congress mukt bharat. Road naming business can happen later.


You know I have always been surprised that Hemchandra Vikramaditya doesn't find mention in India, he was a incredible.

He was. And I really hope he wasnt killed by a stray arrow. He was one who was feared by all and capability to unite whole of India. But alas.
 
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pakistan will follow suit...ganga raam hospital,nankana sahab...and many more.
 
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Feel free to destroy the few remaining temples there too. It is in our interest that you turn a hardcore islamist country like Saudi Arabia.
lol even better u know.atleast all ur bs of akhand bharat will go down in dustbin of history
 
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