Subject: Fwd: BJP -- Development; Congress-- Communalism






NANDIGRAM, JYOTIGRAM AND THE SACHAR REPORT



n??? Mayank Jain 

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Three events are changing the course of the perennial Indian debate on 
secularism and communalism -- Nandigram, Jyotigram and the Sachar Committee 
report. This is for the first time in the history of this debate that the 
tables are being turned on the Congress-Left combine. The self righteousness of 
the communists is now falling out after the Nandigram killings. The communists 
no longer matter as they did in the past. Not many buy their propaganda about 
the Gujarat 'genocide' as we can easily see from the Gujarat election results. 
Even before that 'The Telegraph' dt. October 14, 2007, wrote: "Months after the 
riots, the Bengal government had tried to embarrass Modi by inviting and 
rehabilitating Qutubuddin Ansari, the tailor who had become the face of the 
pogrom after he was photographed with pleading, fearful eyes and folded hands. 
Ansari set up a tailoring shop in Calcutta with government help and was paraded 
at meetings where he contrasted peaceful, harmonious Bengal with Modi's 
Gujarat. His business didn't do well, however, and he returned to Gujarat two 
years later". No wonder, even leftist stalwarts like Jyoti Basu and Budhdhadeb 
Bhattacharya have confessed that socialism was no longer achievable. 

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On the other side, when Modi repeatedly refers to the communal budgeting' of 
the 15-point economic programme of the PM on minorities as divisive, it 
matters. The handsome applause he received at the huge Shivaji park rally in 
Mumbai proves that Modi continues to strike an intense chord with the people on 
all issues of his choosing. The Prime Minister's comment that the Muslims have 
the first right to the resources of the country is just a corollary to the 
Sachar committee report. This time the Congress has taken the agenda of Muslim 
communalism a little too far. Consequently, the term 'communal' is getting 
stuck as a label on the Congress party. Interestingly, while Congress has 
always been on the defensive against ?the BJP on the issue of Muslim 
appeasement, the Congress continued to be 'secular' while the BJP was 
perennially 'communal'. This could change now.

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The communist editors had ensured that it was impossible to associate BJP's 
name with development especially in context of the poor. After the 'India 
Shining' debacle, the BJP has for the first time earned a pro-development image 
for itself. While the 'Jyotigram Yojna' gave electricity to all villages in 
Gujarat, drinking water was simultaneously sent to thousands of parched village 
homes. In addition, the 'Chiranjeevi Yojna' brought down the MMR and IMR in 
Gujarat dramatically -- by giving free delivery facilities to pregnant BPL 
mothers in private hospitals.? Gujarat, no doubt, heads for an unprecedented 
miracle and this has also made the BJP and development synonymous in this part 
of India. 

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Hitherto, being Hindu in India meant not only being communal but also being 
anti-development. A leftist economist of the Delhi School of Economics, Prof. 
Raj Krishna, had coined a term called the 'Hindu Rate of Growth' to explain 
away the then low growth rate of the Indian economy. He was proved wrong 
because 'Modinomics' eventually achieved a miraculous double digit economic 
growth rate in a state dubbed as 'the hotbed of Hindu communalism'. ?Now every 
one knows that the low economic growth rate of India in the Nehruvian era was 
just a relic of the Soviet model. If there is something called 'the Hindu rate 
of growth', it exists in the Gujarat of today.

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-- 
Anjlee 

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