08-23-2009, 09:25 AM
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Two books, two consequences: Shashi Tharoor on Congress icons
Consider what Mr. Tharoor had to say about one of the Congressâ greatest icons â Indira Gandhi. âHad Indiraâs Parsi husband been a toddywalla (liquor trader) rather than so conveniently a Gandhi, I sometime wonder, might Indiaâs political history have been different?â
Further, âMrs. Gandhi was skilled at the acquisition and maintenance of power, but hopeless at the wielding of it for larger purposes. She had no real vision or program beyond the expedient campaign slogans; âremove povertyâ was a mantra without a method â¦. Declaring a state of Emergency, Indira arrested opponents, censored the press, and postponed elections. As a compliant Supreme Court overturned her conviction, she proclaimed a â20-point programmeâ for the uplift of the common man (No one found it humorous enough to remark, as Clemenceau had done of Wilsonâs Fourteen Points, that âeven the good Lord only had ten.â) Its provisions ⦠remained largely unimplemented. Meanwhile her thuggish younger son, Sanjay (1946-1980) emphasizing two of the 20 points, ordered brutally insensitive campaigns of slum demolitions and forced sterilizations.â
Mr. Tharoor did not spare Rajiv Gandhi either, though he acknowledged that the former Prime Ministerâs first year was exhilarating for people like him âwho were swept up in the unfamiliar excitement of having one of our own as Prime Ministerâ: Instead of the âvisionless expediency that had been his motherâs only credo, Rajiv offered transparent sincerity and conviction.â But then, said Mr. Tharoor, âthe rot set in â¦Compromise followed sellout as New Delhi returned to business as usual. Charges of corruption in a major howitzer contract with the Swedish arms manufacturer Bofors tarnished the mystique of the dynasty; little children sang, Galli-galli mein shor hai/Rajiv Gandhi chor hai: âHear it said in every nook/Rajiv Gandhi is a crook.ââ¦â
The current Minister of State also took gentle digs at Sonia Gandhi, pointing out that she went to Cambridge to study English, not political philosophy. Referring to Ms Gandhiâs ârenunciationâ and her nomination of Manmohan Singh as Prime Minister, he said, âA builderâs daughter from Turino, without a college degree, with no experience of Indian life beyond the rarefied realms of the Prime Ministerâs residence, fiercely protective of her privacy, so reserved and unsmiling in public that she has been unkindly dubbed âthe Turin Shroudâ leading a billion Indians at the head of the worldâs most complex, rambunctious and violent democracy? This situation, improbable if werenât true, is proof again of the enduring appeal of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty.â
Mr. Tharoor had a reference to Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Vadra too. Speculating on the reasons for Ms Sonia Gandhi taking charge of the Congress, he said: âAnd then there is, after all, in true dynastic tradition, the need to think of the aspirations of the next generation ... Their [Rahul and Priyanka] fatherâs seat must, observers suggest, be kept warm for one of them â and who better to nurse the Amethi constituency he so successfully nurtured than Sonia herself?â <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Consider what Mr. Tharoor had to say about one of the Congressâ greatest icons â Indira Gandhi. âHad Indiraâs Parsi husband been a toddywalla (liquor trader) rather than so conveniently a Gandhi, I sometime wonder, might Indiaâs political history have been different?â
Further, âMrs. Gandhi was skilled at the acquisition and maintenance of power, but hopeless at the wielding of it for larger purposes. She had no real vision or program beyond the expedient campaign slogans; âremove povertyâ was a mantra without a method â¦. Declaring a state of Emergency, Indira arrested opponents, censored the press, and postponed elections. As a compliant Supreme Court overturned her conviction, she proclaimed a â20-point programmeâ for the uplift of the common man (No one found it humorous enough to remark, as Clemenceau had done of Wilsonâs Fourteen Points, that âeven the good Lord only had ten.â) Its provisions ⦠remained largely unimplemented. Meanwhile her thuggish younger son, Sanjay (1946-1980) emphasizing two of the 20 points, ordered brutally insensitive campaigns of slum demolitions and forced sterilizations.â
Mr. Tharoor did not spare Rajiv Gandhi either, though he acknowledged that the former Prime Ministerâs first year was exhilarating for people like him âwho were swept up in the unfamiliar excitement of having one of our own as Prime Ministerâ: Instead of the âvisionless expediency that had been his motherâs only credo, Rajiv offered transparent sincerity and conviction.â But then, said Mr. Tharoor, âthe rot set in â¦Compromise followed sellout as New Delhi returned to business as usual. Charges of corruption in a major howitzer contract with the Swedish arms manufacturer Bofors tarnished the mystique of the dynasty; little children sang, Galli-galli mein shor hai/Rajiv Gandhi chor hai: âHear it said in every nook/Rajiv Gandhi is a crook.ââ¦â
The current Minister of State also took gentle digs at Sonia Gandhi, pointing out that she went to Cambridge to study English, not political philosophy. Referring to Ms Gandhiâs ârenunciationâ and her nomination of Manmohan Singh as Prime Minister, he said, âA builderâs daughter from Turino, without a college degree, with no experience of Indian life beyond the rarefied realms of the Prime Ministerâs residence, fiercely protective of her privacy, so reserved and unsmiling in public that she has been unkindly dubbed âthe Turin Shroudâ leading a billion Indians at the head of the worldâs most complex, rambunctious and violent democracy? This situation, improbable if werenât true, is proof again of the enduring appeal of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty.â
Mr. Tharoor had a reference to Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Vadra too. Speculating on the reasons for Ms Sonia Gandhi taking charge of the Congress, he said: âAnd then there is, after all, in true dynastic tradition, the need to think of the aspirations of the next generation ... Their [Rahul and Priyanka] fatherâs seat must, observers suggest, be kept warm for one of them â and who better to nurse the Amethi constituency he so successfully nurtured than Sonia herself?â <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->