The young Vajpayee was thought of as a “fiery parliamentarian and star campaigner for the Bharatiya Jana Sangh” | Photo from the book
Our Muslim brethren are getting more and more aggressive, and as a reaction Hindus are getting more and more aggressive. ... But, sir, Hindus will no more take a beating in this country. The tradition of taking a beating went on for 700-800 years.” Thus spoke Atal Bihari Vajpayee, now on his deathbed, in the Indian parliament on May 14, 1970, prompting then prime minister Indira Gandhi to say that she saw “naked fascism behind those words.” Yet author Ullekh N.P. sees a Nehruvian streak in the political philosophy of the man who founded the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the right wing Hindu party now ruling India.
Vajpayee became India’s prime minister thrice, and it was during his second term (1998-2004) that one of his acolytes, Narendra Modi, presided over an anti-Muslim pogrom that killed a minimum of 2,000 people in Gujarat. Modi, writes Ullekh in his book, “shouted back at a Muslim leader on the phone for seeking help after a mob had gathered outside his house. Some hours later, the Muslim leader was lynched, and Modi is alleged to have asked the police forces to let the violence continue.”
Even though Ullekh at times appears generous to Vajpayee, his book is by no means a hagiography for it does bring to light some unsavoury aspects of the Indian leader’s political career, especially streaks of religious bigotry and strong anti-Muslim feelings that he had no shame in going public with. In 1983, even Vajpayee’s own party distanced itself from him when he virtually called for a massacre of “Bangladeshi foreigners” in Assam. If such “intruders” had existed in Punjab, he is reported to have said, they would have been cut to pieces. Within hours, riots followed in which 2,000 men and women, mostly Muslim, were killed.
A biography of Atal Bihari Vajpayee also provides an overview of Indian politics
Vajpayee had an incredibly long political career that began in 1939 and ended in the 21st century, but not before he had weathered storms that rocked his country and brought it to the brink of war twice. He was India’s first non-Congress prime minister to complete a full term, though he also had the shortest tenure when, in 1996, he had to quit 13 days after being sworn in as head of government because he failed to secure a parliamentary majority.
Vajpayee’s involvement with right wing Hindu extremist movements began early in life when he became an active worker of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), founded in 1925 by K.B. Hedgewar, a doctor. An umbrella organisation of all Hindu nationalist parties, the RSS, in the author’s opinion, was “high-caste Hindu and culturally Brahmanical” in character, and attracted young men like Vajpayee, who composed a ballad still popular with RSS workers — “Hindu tan man, Hindu jeevan, rag rag mera Hindu parichay [I am Hindu in heart and body, my life is Hindu, Hindu is my only identity].” Also to inspire Vajpayee in his youth was G.M.S. Golwalkar, the RSS’s second chief, who — in a speech in Delhi some four months after Partition — told his supporters his party wouldn’t “rest content until it had finished Pakistan. If anyone stood in our way we will have to finish him, too.”
Bharatiya Jana Sangh founder S.M. Mookerjee groomed the young Vajpayee — an M.A. in political science — and asked him to translate his speeches into chaste Hindi after purging them of English words. So bigoted and caste-conscious was Mookerjee that he wrote a letter to the viceroy supporting the partition of Bengal, because he did not wish Bengali Muslims to be part of India as they were “a set of converts” from the “dregs of Hindu society.” With this background, it is no wonder that Vajpayee should choose to found a right-wing Hindu party and give it a “soft Hindutva” image to make it one of India’s major political parties. Yet it is difficult to reconcile his soft Hindutva image with his stand on Babri Masjid, in which the Ullekh sees “cunning” in his posture.
Vajpayee was not happy with the mosque’s demolition by Hindu fanatics, but a day later his “language was feisty” and the speech “rousing”, loaded with “sarcasm and innuendoes” about a court’s restraining orders. To “fervent cheers” from the crowd, he added naughtily that, for rituals to be performed, the “earth has to be levelled.” In fact, if it suited him, till he became prime minister, writes the author, Vajpayee could “pander to baser instincts of Hindu hardliners.”
Yet the poet in him, the mellifluous speeches in parliament, the suave diplomat and the peace gestures to Pakistan show a baffling combination of contrasts. His third term as prime minister was eventful vis-a-vis Pakistan and included the nuclear tests, a two-day visit to Lahore, the Kargil war, the eyeball-to-eyeball confrontation of more than a million soldiers across the border following an attack on the Indian parliament, the Agra ‘summit’ talks with Gen Pervez Musharraf, and the infamous airplane hijacking that ended in Kandahar when hostages were released in exchange for three militants — Maulana Masood Azhar, Mushtaq Ahmed Zargar and Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh.