The Rediff Special
'When the whole society is corrupt, how do you expect to
throw up a non-corrupt leader?'
But the Jan Sangh survived him, Golwalkar having never carried
out his threat. He once also told Yadav Rao at a luncheon meeting
of Sangh activists in 1967 that a strong RSS could demolish or
create a hundred Jan Sanghs. The two conclusions to be drawn from
all is that, for all his apprehensions, he felt the Jan Sangh
to be developing along the lines he desired, and that the RSS
was capable of staying the course. No one in the RSS is as sure
now.
Shankarsinh Vaghela's ability to break the BJP government in Gujarat
and set himself up as chief minister has seriously unnerved the
RSS. After the near fall of their government in Rajasthan, Bhairon
Singh Shekhawat appears terribly vulnerable. Faction-fighting
in the party in Madhya Pradesh and Sunderlal Patwa's maladministration
have seriously dented the BJP's claim of being able to give good
government.
And then, the inability of the BJP to get an absolute majority
in the last UP assembly election, despite their having been a
triangular contest with the Samajwadi Party and the Bahujan Samaj
Party, has provoked serious questioning in the top levels of the
BJP and the RSS about the BJP's future. One top BJP leader confessed
to reporters in the aftermath of the UP poll, "We do not
have any emotional issue left." And, neither the BJP nor
the RSS have a clue about how to combat the growing corruption
and casteism in the BJP.
The BJP's position is that it ought to be seen as a political
party operating in a "polluted environment" and that
it should be left to its own devices. There is even visible tiredness
among senior and middle-level party leaders while fielding questions
about RSS perceptions about them. BJP's president L K
Advani said
last week, "The RSS is a separate organisation.
The BJP is a separate organisation. They take their decisions
independently. There is ideological affinity... But political
decisions are taken by the BJP. And organisational matters are
dealt with by the RSS."
Advani has probably made the statement to many reporters before
this. RSS leaders also understand the need for BJP leaders to
function autonomously, and to be seen to be doing so. But the
pace of deterioration has been so rapid that both sides decided
to shed pretences this January and have H V Seshadri, the RSS general
secretary, spend considerable time at the Virar convention of
the BJP. The last time a senior RSS leader attended a Jan Sangh/BJP
conference was 40 years ago, and it could now be a case of too
little, too late.
"We cannot stop the corruption in the BJP" says the
RSS's Devendra Swaroop, candidly. "When the whole society
is corrupt, how do you expect to throw up a non-corrupt leader?
It is even difficult now to say who is corrupt and who is not
corrupt. It is only a matter of degrees. Without money you cannot
contest a ward election. And a non-corrupt politician cannot win
an election." Adds Mahesh Sharma, the BJP's Rajya Sabha MP
from Rajasthan, "You cannot fight elections without black
money. Even the voters are corrupt."
Is the RSS and the BJP leadership giving up then? "Not at
all," says Seshadri Chari, the editor of the Organiser,
the RSS mouthpiece. "The BJP leadership is seized of
the problem. And, of course, we in the RSS are not sitting tight
and watching the degeneration." But it is going to be an uphill
task.
The BJP is not the old Jan Sangh. While a smallish core
is formed of those pracharaks who came from the RSS (like Vajpayee
and Advani), and the layer outside it is of non-RSS men (like
Shekhawat) who felt an ideological affinity, it is the outer,
most numerous, non-ideological layer of those attracted to the
BJP because of its power prospects who are causing the most trouble.
"They are infecting the two inside layers," said an
RSS functionary.
One possible cure is injecting more RSS pracharaks into
the BJP. "That is a possibility," agrees Chari. "The
states will need, to start with, at least two dozen pracharaks
each. But, of course, this has to be acceptable to the BJP."
Will it be? Govindacharya, himself a former RSS pracharak,
is unimpressed. "Why should it be that only the RSS has value-based
people? We should we just become an extension of the RSS? We should
function in the field on our own. The RSS has never believed in
spoon-feeding."
Perhaps, it has not. But it is also for the first time that a
feeling has grown in the RSS that the BJP has become too big for
it. "The growth of the BJP has outstripped that of the RSS,"
says an RSS functionary. "This is but natural. But it has
produced asymmetries in the Sangh Parivar. Why do you think
the BJP government collapsed in Gujarat? Because, the RSS was
never strong there."
This is a fact that Govindacharya cannot deny. But he is unwavering
in his belief that the BJP alone can -- and should -- put its
house in order. At Virar, a scheme was mooted to re-educate the
non-RSS BJP members of the Sangh ideology, and Govindacharya
is seriously going about putting up a sort of school for this
purpose.
The RSS, meanwhile, has begun its own high-pressure campaign
to educate BJP MPs. Seshadri, the general secretary of the
RSS, has held nearly half-a-dozen meetings with them, and a view
is being simultaneously articulated that what the BJP needs at
this time is not an individualistic, charismatic president but
an RSS-style collective leadership.
Kind courtesy: Sunday magazine
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