The Rediff Special / Varsha Bhosle
'If we were thugs, people would have booted us out long ago'
We met, I mean really met, within the celluloid frame: Like Balasaheb,
Raj is a cartoonist; unlike Balasaheb, he's a maniacal Hollywood-movie-buff.
So much so that he shoots off unsolicited ideas to the likes of
Steven Spielberg, and someday plans to produce an English film.
His eyes light up, his pitch changes, his animation triples when
he speaks of David Lean or John Williams or James Cameron. It
was a delightful insight to this lad who, hands akimbo, vigorously
orates on caste/creed relations and regional chauvinism to seas
of spellbound devotees. Ah, the demands of reality.
I cannot tell a lie: I unprofessionally gave Raj some leeway,
in deference to his rawness. I set out to do an argumentative
expose, and end up delivering the views of a part of Bombay's
possible future. The thing is, I liked him. That is, at least
until he does a Pramod Navalkar on me.
Marathi Chauvinism:
Was it the Shiv Sena that divided this country
linguistically? Then, why is it a sin to ensure that the very
basis of the formation of this state should be given its due?
Do they speak Hindi in Chennai? Aren't governmental forms in Calcutta
written in Bengali? Then why are these holier-than-thou doses
on cultural and linguistic chauvinism reserved only for Maharashtra?
My stand is, if you cannot honour Marathi as the language of the
state, then we have no choice but to force you to.
In the'60s, the Sena reacted to the stranglehold of non-Maharashtrians
on Mumbai. But things have changed now people understood our outlook,
and we have a good percentage of non-Marathi votes. The struggle
is over -- we never saw the issue as vote-bank politics; it was
a matter of the rights of the bhoomi-putra.
Secularism:
I believe that religion is a personal thing, to be
practised only at home. Occasional festivals like Ganesh Utsav,
Narvrati, Id, Muharram, etc are fine; the problem begins when
religion interferes in everyday life. That's what the call for
Hindutva is all about -- it's a reaction to minority appeasement.
Prayers on loudspeakers disturbed hospitals, and namaaz flowing
out on streets blocked traffic. So we reacted with maha-aartis,
worsened the situation, and brought it to the public's notice.
You ask, why did we stoop to that level. I ask, if we had stopped
the namaaz, who'd have borne the responsibility? It doesn't take
much to riot under the name of religious freedom.
For a change, why doesn't the media give Muslims a dose on secularist
ethics? In a rational world, secularists would have supported
us because secularism means non-interference of religion in civic
life. In a rationally secular world, illegal immigrants are criminals,
regardless of their religion or race. Not so, here: Two years
ago, six Bangladeshis were deported by Pakistan to India, and
they are in Mumbai! Why? Is Mumbai Asia's dharmashala?
Bal Thackeray:
What I like most about him is the quality absent
in politicians: What's in his heart, rises to his tongue. There's
no guile, and no sheltering behind others. That, perhaps, is his
greatest influence on me. He has a satirist's sense of humour
-- which the press systematically distorts.
Eight years ago when I entered politics, Balasaheb heard my speech
and said to me, 'Mudde chaangle ahet (the issues are worthy).
But remember that though the thought must be yours, the language
must always be that of the audience.' He taught me that communicating
with people is not the same as catering to them: If my audience
is used to abusive language, I won't start abusing, too, but neither
will I flash a chaste language at it.
In our family, I doubt if anybody else has accompanied him on
tours or seen him in action as much as I have: even as a child,
I was always with him. Apart from hereditary resemblances, that
early influence will always be there. People say that I copy his
stance, but the posture comes naturally to me -- and it is aggressive
body-language.
The Sena throne:
Both Uddhav and I got into politics only to assist
Balasaheb. Neither of us entered with the thought, 'next,
who?' -- I don't know why you pit us against each other.
What matters is how we see ourselves, and not how others see us.
Yes, Uddhav is basically a shy person. But even Indira Gandhi
was called a goongi guidya by Kamaraj -- and look what she did
to him. Uddhav is very intelligent, and when the responsibility
falls on him, he will be as assertive as anybody else.
The question of factionism doesn't arise: Shiv Sainiks are neither
mine, nor Uddhav's -- they all belong to Balasaheb. It's true
that eka myaanet phakta ekach talwar rahte (only one sword can
fit in a scabbard), but why be so futuristic? Could you have told
me three years ago that Rao could go to jail? In politics, it's the
people who elect. I've thought about it completely -- we won't
hurt each other. Uddhav should become the CM.
Voter profile:
When the Sena was born, the upper classes were
resistant to us, and I don't blame them for it: They did not encounter
the problems that the poor and middle-class faced from the influx
of non-Maharashtrians. But since after the riots and bomb blasts
in Mumbai, and especially after Balasaheb's appearance on Aap
Ki Adaalat,the mood of the upper class, too, has changed. I know
that the Sena cuts through all classes today.
Regional party:
I feel the Sena must develop a national presence.
The kind of work we are doing in Maharashtra should be carried
to every state. Biharis, Uddipis, etc, leave their families and come to
Mumbai only because they feel they can get jobs here. It's important
to develop centres in other states so that people don't need to
leave their homes.
Sena Goondaism:
In every system, there are elements taking advantage
of the power structure -- when we detect them, they are removed.
If we were the thugs as portrayed, people would have booted us
out long ago. During their convention in Nagpur, the Youth Congress
boys harassed train passengers, wrecked civic property, didn't
pay for meals -- but the press doesn't stamp them as goondas,
does it?
When some Sainiks spontaneously attacked journalists, Balasaheb
wrote against it in Saamna, ordering them to ignore the slander
by the press. Had Balasaheb been in place of Kanshi Ram, I wonder
where we would be -- how quickly you people forgot that assault.
The other day, I heard somebody was printing receipts in my name;
in Nashik, someone else collected Rs 8 lakhs (Rs 800,000),
in my name -- I had
them arrested. But it's not possible to know everything. We have
issued orders to shakha pramukhs, repeatedly requested people
to complain to us, and alerted the police. You tell me what else
I can do.
This interview first appeared in The Sunday Observer, India's first Sunday newspaper.
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