Ja Sangh to BJP: Battling India's pluralism

By Amulya Ganguli 

rendra Modi's views of the historical events at the time of partition are as problematic as his understanding of what happened in the subsequent periods. Iugurating the new, plush, 170,000 sq. feet, vaastu-compliant Bharatiya Jata Party (BJP) office in New Delhi, he said that the party in its earlier avatar as the Ja Sangh was at the forefront of all the leading mass movements in the country.

However, this assessment is unlikely to be shared by those who are not followers of the BJP. In their opinion, far from being a leading player during popular agitations in the 1950s and 1960s, the Ja Sangh was very much on the margins of the political scene if only because it carried the stain of responsibility for Mahatma Gandhi's assassition and was shunned by the Muslims. The liberal Hindus, too, looked upon the Ja Sangh as a backward-looking party of the "cow belt", representing all that was primitive in the Indian mind.

This somewhat lowly status can be seen from the fact that the Ja Sangh won only three Lok Sabha seats in the 1952 general election with 3.06 per cent votes. Its subsequent performances were only margilly better. The party won four seats in 1957 (5.93 per cent), 14 seats in 1962 (6.44 per cent), 35 seats, its best performance till then, in 1967 with 9.41 per cent votes and 22 seats in 1971 (7.35 per cent). These figures do not substantiate the claim about the Ja Sangh being a major player in the political scene.

Not surprisingly, the party was not averse to losing its identity in 1977 when it merged with three other equally margil players -- the Congress (O), the Congress for Democracy and the Socialist Party -- to form the Jata Party. If the Ja Sangh was as important as it is claimed to be, it wouldn't have given up its distinct status so readily. As for the three others, they were all bit players and have since disappeared although prominent politicians of the time -- Morarji Desai, Charan Singh, Jagjivan Ram, Madhu Limaye -- were associated with them.

However, it has to be acknowledged that the Ja Sangh was able to reinvent itself as the BJP after the latter was formed in 1980 and now represents one of the poles of Indian politics. From this standpoint, the loss of its earlier identity may have been a blessing in disguise for it could start all over again. But the crucial link between its earlier self and the present one remains. It is that of commulism -- the cornerstone of its ideology.

Indeed, this trait has become even more pronounced with the BJP's assumption of power at the Centre in 2014. Nothing demonstrated this characteristic more starkly than the assertion by a BJP MP, Sakshi Maharaj, that thuram Godse, Mahatma Gandhi's assassin, was a patriot. It is a safe bet that a claim of this ture would not have been made by anyone in the Ja Sangh in the immediate post-Independence decades when it was supposedly leading mass movements. The party simply did not have the confidence then to do so when it was unsure of its place in the social and political worlds.

As a result, the Ja Sangh had kept its core beliefs under wraps. If the BJP is less discrete now, the reason is that it believes it has been somewhat better able than before to sell its anti-Muslim ideology in the garb of tiolism and by promising vikas or development which, it claims, can be provided only by Modi, who has been described as God's gift to the tion by Vice President Venkaiah idu.

The BJP has also been helped by the weakening of its opponent, viz., the Congress, which no longer wears the halo as at the time of Independence and for about two decades afterwards when it had no real challengers. At the same time, it is obvious that the BJP's progress at the central level has been by fits and starts, pointing towards flawed policies which do not have wide popular approval.

The party's first stint under Atal Behari Vajpayee was followed by a break of 10 years when the Congress was in power. Now, there is speculation that rendra Modi may find it difficult to repeat his performance of 2014 when the BJP won a majority on its own in the Lok Sabha. The grapevine in Lutyens Delhi now predicts that the party's tally of seats will be around 200-220, dropping from the present 282.

Rumours of this ture explain the BJP's caution, as in its Ja Sangh days, against unfurling the Sangh parivar's saffron flag to the fullest extent possible. Sakshi Maharaj, for instance, has been told not to praise Godse again.

What this circumspection indicates is the BJP's realisation that it remains a square peg of sectarianism in the round hole of India's pluralism. From the Ja Sangh days to the present, the party of cultural tiolism -- one tion, one people, one culture -- has been an outsider, battling unsuccessfully against India's D of cultural assimilation. (IANS)

(Amulya Ganguli is a political alyst. The views expressed are persol. He can be reached at amulyaganguli@gmail.com)

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