Modi’s rhetoric is yet again under the scanner, as he uses Rabindranath Tagore's lines from the poem, 'Where The Mind Is Without Fear' and associates the state to the legacies 'of Swami Vivekananda, Rishi Aurobindo, Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose and Rabindranath Tagore'. The opposition has criticised BJP’s attempt at appropriating Bengal’s cultural icons and iconography multiple times in the past. From RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat interpreting Tagore’s ‘Swadeshi Samaj’ as his vision of a Hindu Rashtra in 2015 to BJP’s fervent attempts at threading Subhash Chandra Bose into most conversations surrounding the state, critics and academics have pointed at the fallacy as both Tagore and Bose harboured an idea of nationalism that denounced fundamentalism, religious majoritarianism and was directly in contrast with from BJP’s ideological core of Hindutva. Keeping in the mind the numerous instances of violence against Bengali speaking workers in numerous BJP-ruled states of Bengal which had led to major popular dissatisfaction against Centre’s hold over the matter, critics identify this as a rehashed strategy of the BJP trying to prevent alienating the Bengali middle-class.