Interview
INSULT
TO GANDHIJI RECTIFIED
 |
|
Mani
Shankar Aiyar
|
The
Union Minister of Petroleum, Shri Mani Shankar Aiyar speaks
on his stand on Savarkar in an interview to Shri Vir Sanghvi
Are
you surprised by the controversy set off by your actions?
Yes,
I thought that the issue was Gandhiji. They are making out
that the issue is Savarkar. All I have done is rectified
the NDA's insult to Gandhiji.
Explain
that.
The
controversy is about the eternal flame which is called the
Swatantra Jyot. It is not called the Savarkar Jyot or the
Shahid Jyot. I find it extraordinary that a Swatantra Jyot
should make no mention of Gandhiji.
I
was lighting the flame on 9 August, which is the anniversary
of Quit India Ð which Savarkar, incidentally, described
as Split India Ð and I said in my speech that Gandhiji's
slogan was Karenge Ya Marenge. It was not Karenge Ya Maarenge.
Only
Ram Naik and the Sangh Parivar with their distorted view
of history can think of the Quit India movement or even,
of the freedom struggle, without according central place
to Gandhiji.
What
did you say about Savarkar?
I
said nothing about him in my speech at the function. Nor
did Lt. Governor Ram Kapse mention him. Afterwards, there
was a press conference. Once again, nobody asked me about
Savarkar and nor did I mention him.
After
the press conference, a TV reporter asked my views on Savarkar.
I said that my views were well known but whatever I had
said or written about Savarkar was in my capacity as a free
individual. Now, as a member of the Council of Ministers,
I was bound by the views of the Cabinet.
I
was asked if I still opposed the renaming of Port Blair
airport after Savarkar and I confirmed that while I had
certainly written this, I was now bound by the Cabinet's
view on the subject.
When
I was asked about Shahid Park, I said that the Shahid Park
was dedicated to those who had been made shahid during the
freedom struggle or at the Cellular jail itself. It would
diminish the memory of the martyrs if it also included people
who had not actually been martyred. For instance, Savarkar
did not die in the Andamans or even during the freedom struggle
but died 20 years after independence of natural causes at
home at the ripe old age of 83.
He
was, of course, a freedom fighter. But happily, he was not
martyred.
Why
did you remove the plaque dedicated to his memory?
The
Swatantra Jyot is mounted on a plinth that has four sides.
On all four sides are plaques dedicated to the freedom struggle.
Two of the plaques commemorate Madanlal Dhingra and Bhagat
Singh, both renowned shahids. A third plaque contains several
stirring patriots sayings. Bizarrely, there was no mention
at all of Gandhiji.
I
thought it essential that we had a plaque recording Gandhiji's
contribution to the freedom struggle. But there was no fifth
side to put a plaque.
The
only way we could have accommodated this plaque was by removing
one of the existing plaques. The fourth plaque remembered
Bahadur Shah Zafar and Savarkar and that was the one I removed.
Do
you regret that?
Certainly
not. As a patriotic Indian I was appalled to find a representation
of our freedom struggle that completely ignored Gandhiji.
As a responsible citizen, it was my duty to undo the insult
to the father of the nation. I'm proud to have done that.
You
could argue that the Savarkar plaque was appropriate because
he was imprisoned in that jail. Gandhiji was not.
Really?
Then why was Savarkar on the same plaque as Bahadur Shah
Zafar? How is that appropriate to the Andaman jail?
For
that matter, neither Dhingra nor Bhagat Singh was hanged
in the Cellular Jail, So, if it was appropriateness that
Ram Naik was after, then he could have used the Swatantra
Jyot to commemorate the hundreds of martyrs who died in
the jail rather than one inmate who was released and who,
happily, attained ripe old age in independent India.
It
is not a question of 'why Savarkar'? It is a question of
'why not everyone else incarcerated in that jail?' And if
it is a question of choosing between two freedom fighters
then, in my view, Gandhiji must take precedence over everyone
else.
Do
you regard Savarkar as a patriot?
There
is no doubt that Savarkar was a patriot. He loved his country.
But he insisted his country was a Hindu nation. He also
insisted that Muslims constituted a different nation. My
patriotism embraces equally all the communities of India.
I therefore believe in Bharatyata not Hindutva, a word coined
by Savarkar to stand for Hindudom not Hinduism.
Savarkar
himself was an atheist until his conversion to Buddhism
late in life. His was a political demand for a Hindu nation.
Mine is a secular belief in a secular nation. My patriotism
is in the Gandhian mould. So I have nothing to be apologetic
about.
Will
your remarks cost the Congress the Maharashtra election?
After
five years in opposition in Maharashtra, the BJP/Shiv Sena
combine can't find a single anti-incumbency issue and therefore,
like drowning men, is clutching at straws.
I
do not think that their slapping my effigy with chappals
Ð especially when the effigy looks more like Ram Naik
than me Ð is going to change one vote in Maharashtra.
The
effigy is part of the attack on 'Madrasis' which is an old
Shiv Sena habit. They draped around the neck of the effigy
a black scarf which only Vaiko and members of the MDMK wear.
And they buttoned the top button of the kurta which Ram
Naik does and which I consider an offence to good taste
and proper dressing.
What
about the insult to Maharashtra?
There
is no insult to Maharashtra. The people of Maharashtra are
well aware that giving Gandhiji place of high honour does
not constitute an insult to Maharashtrian honour. I did
not insult Savarkar. I only rectified an insult to Bapu.
Why
haven't you said all this before?
I
tried very hard to say this in Parliament. It was the opposition
which insisted that I make a statement. The leader of the
House, Pranab Mukherjee, agreed immediately. I was ready
with my statement. I had it cleared with the Speaker which
is a necessary formality.
I
was all dressed up in my cleanest white kurta Ð with
the top button undone. But I was left with nowhere to go
because the barracking continued for the rest of the session.
So
what I should have said in the highest forum of democracy,
I am now obliged to say in the rather more humble environs
of the Hindustan Times.