Why we need to worry about ABVP's 'nationalism'
The outfit has successfully managed to brand the Left as anti-national and united itself with the public through the idea of 'greater good' and 'patriotism'.
Nationalism is power hunger tempered by self-deception, wrote George Orwell.
In 2014, ABVP (the student wing of BJP) gained 10 lakh
members. The sudden surge in enrolment could be attributed to the
general elections and the wave of patriotism swept by the Achhe Din
campaign.
With its parent party at the centre of national politics,
ABVP's star has been systematically on the rise. In the last two years,
more have enrolled in the extreme right-wing student party. In Delhi
alone, there are over 38,000 members and its total membership exceeds
33,00,000. It is now the largest youth political party in the country
and its influence is rapidly increasing.
The signs of this are everywhere. In 2015, it won a seat in
the most unusual place - Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), the bastion
of the Left (the only other time it had done so was 13 years ago, when
AB Vajpayee was prime minister in 2002).
That same year, the ABVP won elections at a Calcutta college
(Institute of Jute Technology). Last year it cemented its in-roads in
Kerala, a state that has traditionally been Left, by winning elections
at Kannur University.
In UP, its numbers have been on a steady rise. Right now, it
controls the student unions of at least 18 universities across India.
ABVP might have the numbers, but it is the Left that has led
student politics in India and there is a lot of bitterness attached to
the fact. When BJP MLA OP Sharma led students to bash up Kanhaiya Kumar
at his court appearance, some of this bitterness became apparent.
It was further highlighted when a BJP member brought up P
Muralidhar Rao and how he was “nearly killed by the Naxals” as a member
of the ABVP in the 1980s, after he was questioned about the impunity
reserved for ABVP.
The ABVP was formed 33 years before the BJP, registered in
1949, with the aim of “nation-building.” The idea at the time was to
give an alternate to Leftist student politics of the time. If you look
at the website of the organisation, some of its zealousness becomes
clear - to become a candidate, a person must “treat the nation as
supreme”. One must have “character” and be willing to deal with
“anti-national elements" with “fervent pride”.
ABVP's number one enemy is the communist Left. Photo: PTI |
Two things have become apparent in the last two years - the
ABVP has taken upon itself to sensitise university campuses on
nationalistic as well as Hindu agenda and that it will largely continue
to be intolerant of minority voices that don’t toe its line of patriotic
candour.
And, of course, its number one enemy is the communist Left,
which it has managed to successfully brand as anti-national and
un-Indian. This repeated branding of the Left as “anti-national” has
served a larger purpose, it has brought ABVP closer to the majoritarian
common masses and united them through the idea of the greater good in
the name of patriotism.
Last year, when protests broke out at JNU over
anti-nationalism, ABVP members came out in hoards. The most noticeable
aspect of these protests were the number of women at the forefront of
the protests. A fact that was very noticeable because traditionally it
has always been the Left that has had women prominently at its helm.
Organisations such as AISA, SFI and even the ASA for that
matter have had articulate women leaders who have led dissent. Scores of
young women are joining the ABVP with patriotism in mind; also ABVP
realises that in order to tackle the Left successfully, women need to be
at the forefront, pushing their agenda. And somehow it seems to be
working.
Take the Ramjas College case for example, which saw
ABVP-induced violence against professors and students for a programme
titled “cultures of protest” in which JNU scholar Umar Khalid was a
speaker for his PhD thesis on “War on Tribals”.
While there has been widespread backlash over the incident
across the media and the university, comments under some of the videos
on YouTube and Facebook have been mind-numbingly "patriotic" and
pro-ABVP.
Which is as shocking as it is disheartening, and points to
the fact that the ABVP has managed to successfully become the
footsoldiers of intolerance against any debate over patriotism. The fact
that they use violence to get their message across is something that is
viewed as a minor inconvenience in the face of nationalism.
Whether it is delivering a lecture on tribal rights, eating
beef, talking about Muslims, Kashmir or being a minority in India, or
even talking about something that might not be deemed moral - basically
anything that doesn’t appeal to the majoritarian idea of India and your
place in it, is going to be perceived as anti-national and if you’re a
part of it, despite knowing that, you deserve what is coming to you, the
ABVP seems to be saying.
Ever since Independence, this idea of absolute patriotism,
bordering on jingoism is very appealing to the masses, but it has been
pushed aggressively by the NDA government. When the Prime Minister
kneeled at the gates of Parliament in obeisance before his swearing-in
ceremony, the crowds went crazy.
This was followed by a national beef ban, which was
immediately followed by the lynching of a Muslim (whose murderer was
wrapped in the national flag at his cremation). The hoisting of national
flags in schools and colleges and the very recent directive on the
playing of the national anthem before movie screenings - are all ideas
stemming from an overzealous patriotic mindset which will continue to
draw people, until its agenda of obliterating discourse and free thought
is successful.