NARENDRA MODI'S victory with a two-thirds majority in Gujarat
has signalled the emergence of a strong, independent OBC (Other backward Class)
leader in the BJP. Earlier, two independent OBC leaders — Laloo Prasad Yadav and
Mulayam Singh Yadav — had emerged from the fold of socialist politics in Bihar
and Uttar Pradesh. But that was in the context of the Yadavs emerging as landed
gentry with some socio-economic capital.
The others who became Chief Ministers in the Congress and the
BJP were not independent leaders. In the BJP, Kalyan Singh tried to emerge as an
independent leader but the Parivar structures did not allow him to do so. For a
long time no independent OBC leader was allowed to emerge from within the
Parivar. Only Atal Behari Vajpayee and L. K. Advani were allowed that autonomous
space as they had social and economic clout around them.
Mr. Modi, member of a Backward Caste that has little
socio-economic clout in Gujarat, used the Parivar policy of attacking the
deliberately constructed enemy — Muslims — with a more organised network than
that of the Parivar's Brahmin leaders. He has become a bigger hero than Mr.
Advani by mobilising muscle power better than Mr. Advani did in 1992. He seems
to have realised that only the weapon of violence — not sacrifice — can make an
individual a hero and that the social value of Dharma is assigned to the
victorious, not the sufferer.
Ever since the Hindutva network began to organise caste-ridden
Indian society into a religious- nationalist social force, one of its main
problems was how to bring the Sudras/OBCs into its fold without giving them
equal rights in the spiritual realm. To achieve it, the Hindutva ideologues
constructed an imaginary nationalist goal and asked the otherwise uneducated
OBCs to participate in nation-building without granting them a share in the
national wealth. This was necessary because the caste system was undercutting
the social base of the Hindu religion as the Dalits and even some OBCs were
embracing other religions. For political and social consolidation of the
Brahminical ideology such a task was deemed necessary. The Mandal agenda of the
OBCs, initiated by forces outside the Hindutva network, was seen as a plan to
undercut Hindu nationalism and the consolidation of forces towards
majoritarianism.
The Sangh Parivar successfully organised a large section of
OBCs (not as many Dalits) because neither the Congress, which had been in power
for several decades, nor the communists, who were talking about socialism, had
granted any visible socio-political place in their party structures to the OBCs.
In the general environment of Anglicised Brahminism dominating all political
formations, a majority of the OBCs were getting attracted to the Parivar network
which spoke the native idiom and promised a dream land of Hindu Rashtra if the
Muslims were driven out of India. In that crucial period, V.P Singh and the
small OBC lobby around him planned the Mandal agenda that disturbed every
organised party but the BJP more. The BJP then raised the Mandir-Masjid issue as
a diversionary tactic. For the OBCs in the Sangh Parivar it was an occasion
where they could use their only asset — muscle power — against the constructed
enemy, Muslims.
When the Sangh Parivar needed mass muscle power it had to turn
to the OBCs within and it was in this situation that Mr. Advani with the help of
Hindutva theoreticians such as Govindacharya worked out a mediating language of
social engineering for advancing Hindutva. The Advani faction assigned some
leadership roles to the OBCs. Mr. Kalyan Singh and Vinay Katiyar from Uttar
Pradesh, Uma Bharti from Madhya Pradesh, Mr. Modi from Gujarat and so on got
some positions in the Sangh Parivar. By then, the political ambitions of OBC
leaders everywhere were whetted, but without a vision for the socio-spiritual
transformation of Indian society. This was aided and abetted by the environment
created by the Bahujan Samaj Party's Kanshi Ram with the "our votes for our
seats" slogan.
The BJP made serious efforts, much more than other parties, to
include and accommodate the
OBCs so as to provide Hindutva its muscle power. The
secularists and communists remained more backward in this strategy than the
Hindutva forces. The illiterate OBC masses did not understand the whole debate
of secularism, socialism and communalism in relation to their own lives. They
understood the Mandal discourse because it gave them some jobs. The communists
promised heaven but no OBC was getting a visible place in those theory-centred
organisations at the national and regional level. For such a social mass, the
Parivar had a practical solution: participate in muscle power mobilisation and
get the benefits. After the Babri demolition campaign the OBCs began getting the
recognition within Hindu Brahminic civil society they had craved for long.
Those wanting to be leaders in the Sangh Parivar had only to
abuse Muslims in the fiercest language possible. Mr. Modi and Ms. Bharti could
do that well. In the Congress, one needed sophisticated education and the
ability to speak the nuanced language of secularism to become a national leader.
The P. V. Narasimha Rao period was the real Brahminic period of the Congress in
which all OBC leaders with some stature were systematically set aside. The
communists did not nurture a single OBC leader and even after the Mandal period
they sought only alliances with leaders such as Mr. Mulayam Singh and Mr. Laloo
Yadav with all the necessary care to see that their theory remained "pure". Now,
for the average educated OBC the Hindutva party became the easy option.
However, it was not as if the temple-centered Hindu priestly
class that had been giving full support to leaders such as Mr. Vajpayee and
Murli Manohar Joshi was not uneasy with the new visibility of the OBCs. It was.
Now, Mr. Modi has emerged as the hero of the OBCs within Parivar; he could even
ignore Mr. Vajpayee and set his own agenda. For the first time an OBC leader had
become praiseworthy for the Brahmin and other upper caste leaders and was in
full command of Gujarat — the mini Hindu Rashtra. How did he do that? By
deploying the muscle power of the OBCs under his command and asking the upper
caste leaders of the BJP to simply supervise his command structure in attacking
the imaginary enemy, constructed by the very same Brahminic theoreticians, in
real, physical terms.
The media, busy retaining the secular image of India, did not
realise how an average OBC viewed the rise of such a leader. His cutouts were
bigger than those of Mr. Vajpayee or Mr. Advani. In this atmosphere, a section
of upper castes — particularly Brahmins and Baniyas — seemed to have moved
towards the Congress but the OBCs seemed to have voted en masse for their new
hero. If Mr. Katiyar repeats this in Uttar Pradesh we will have one more hero,
perhaps at the cost of more lives there.
There is a lesson here for the secularists and the communists.
As Hinduism did not allow Dalits to get into temples they began to move towards
Islam, Christianity and Buddhism. If the secularists and the communists do not
allow the OBCs to grow in their organisations Mr. Modi will become their
national leader and their Prime Ministerial candidate too. And in such a
situation, feeble OBC voices like mine will be drowned.