---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Abhiyya <abhi...@yahoo.com>
Date: Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 6:56 PM
Subject: An open letter to Uddhav Thackeray - Rajdeep Sardesai
To:


 *"Your charming son, Aditya, who is studying English Literature in St
Xaviers College, had sent me a collection of his poems. I was most impressed
with his writing skills. Let's hope the next generation of the T company
will finally realize that there is more to life than rabble-rousing!"*

An open letter to Uddhav Thackeray

*Rajdeep Sardesai*<http://ibnlive.in.com/blogs/author/1/rajdeepsardesai.html>



*Dear Udhavjee*,



At the very outset, my compliments for the manner in which you've literally
'stolen' the headlines from your cousin Raj in the last fortnight. After the
Assembly election defeat last October, there were many who had written you
off as a weak, namby-pamby politician, who would be better off doing
photography. But now, it seems that the 'fire' which burns inside Bal
Thackeray is alive in the son too. After years of struggling to establish
yourself, you have finally discovered the mantra for success as a Shiv Sena
leader: find an 'enemy', threaten and intimidate them, commit the odd
violent act, and, eureka!, you are anointed the true heir to the original
'T' company supremo.



Your cousin has chosen to bash faceless taxi drivers and students from North
India, soft targets who are totally unprotected. You've been much braver.
You've actually chosen to target national icons: Sachin Tendulkar, Mukesh
Ambani, Shah Rukh Khan, powerful figures who most Indians venerate. Shah
Rukh is no surprise since the Sena has always been uncomfortable with the
Indian Muslim identity. Forty years ago, your father had questioned Dilip
Kumar's patriotism for accepting an award from the Pakistani government.
You've called Shah Rukh a traitor for wishing to choose Pakistani cricketers
in the IPL. That your father invited Javed Miandad, the former Pakistani
captain and a close relation of Dawood Ibrahim, to your house is a matter of
record that we shall not go into today.



I am a little surprised that you chose to question Ambani and Tendulkar
though. The Sena has always enjoyed an excellent relationship with corporate
India. Why then criticise India's biggest businessman for suggesting that
Mumbai belongs to all? After all, no one can deny that Mumbai's
entrepreneurial energy has been driven by communities from across India. The
diatribe against Sachin is even more strange. He is, alongwith Lata
Mangeshkar, Maharashtra's most admired and recognised face. Surely, you will
agree that Sachin symbolizes Maharashtrian pride in a manner that renaming
shops and streets in Marathi never can.

Of course, in-between some of your local thugs also attacked the IBN Lokmat
office. I must confess that initially the attack did leave me outraged. Why
would a political outfit that claims to protect Maharashtrian culture attack
a leading Marathi news channel? But on reflection I realized that we hadn't
been singled out: over the last four decades, the Shiv Sena has targeted
some of Maharashtra's finest literary figures and journalistic institutions.
That you continue to live in a colony of artists while attacking artistic
freedom remains one of the many tragic ironies in the evolution of the Sena.


Just before the Assembly elections, you had told me in an interview that you
were determined to shake off the Shiv Sena's legacy of violence. You spoke
of the need for welfarist politics, of how you were saddened that rural
Maharashtra was being left behind. I was impressed by the farmer rallies you
had organized, by the fact that you had documented farmer suicides in the
state. I thought that Uddhav Thackeray was serious about effecting a change
in Maharashtra's political landscape.

I was obviously mistaken. Farmer suicides still continue, the after-effects
of drought are still being faced in several districts, but the focus is now
squarely on finding high profile hate figures. You claim to have a vision
for Mumbai. Yet, on the day the Sena-controlled city's municipal
corporation's annual budget revealed an alarming financial crisis, your
party mouthpiece, *Saamna*, was running banner headlines seeking an apology
from Shah Rukh Khan. You asked your Shiv Sainiks to agitate against Rahul
Gandhi's visit to Mumbai, but why have you not asked them to wage a war
against the water cuts that have made life so difficult for millions in the
city?

At one level, I can understand the reasons for your frustration. The
Congress-NCP government in the state has been thoroughly incompetent: the
last decade has seen Maharashtra decline on most social and economic
parameters. Yet, the Shiv Sena has been unable to capture power in the
state. Your war with cousin Raj has proved to be self-destructive. The
Assembly election results showed that a united Sena may have offered a real
challenge to the ruling alliance. In fact, the Sena and the MNS together
garnered around 43 per cent of the popular vote in Mumbai-Thane, almost
seven per cent more than what was obtained by the Congress-NCP combine. Yet,
because your vote was split, you won just nine of the 60 seats in the
region, a result which proved decisive in the overall state tally.

Your defeat seems to have convinced you that the only way forward is to
outdo your cousin in parochial politics. It's a strategy which has
undoubtedly made you a headline-grabber once again. Unfortunately,
television rating points don't get you votes or goodwill. There is space in
Maharashtra's politics for a regional force, but it needs to be based on a
constructive, inclusive identity.

Tragically, the Shiv Sena has never offered a serious social or economic
agenda for the future. Setting up the odd *wada pav* stall in Mumbai is
hardly a recipe for addressing the job crisis . Why hasn't the Sena, for
example, started training projects to make Maharashtrian youth face upto the
challenges of a competitive job market? Why doesn't the Sena give regional
culture a boost by supporting Marathi theatre, literature or cinema? The
wonderful Marathi film, "Harishchandrachee Factory", nominated for the
Oscars, has been co-produced by Ronnie Screwvala, a Parsi, who like millions
of other 'outsiders' has made Mumbai his home. Maybe, I ask for too much.
Tigers, used to bullying others for years, will never change their stripes.



*Post-script:* Your charming son, Aditya, who is studying English Literature
in St Xaviers College, had sent me a collection of his poems. I was most
impressed with his writing skills. Let's hope the next generation of the T
company will finally realize that there is more to life than rabble-rousing!


*Jai Hind, Jai Maharashtra!*

http://ibnlive.in.com/blogs/rajdeepsardesai/1/61523/an-open-letter-to-uddhav-thackeray.html

*With Regards

Abi*


“At his best, man is the noblest of all animals; separated from law and
justice he is the worst”

*- Aristotle*




-- 


You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot build up a
nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you will build on the
foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
-AMBEDKAR



http://venukm.blogspot.com

http://www.shelfari.com/kmvenuannur

http://kmvenuannur.livejournal.com

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