|
|
Political revolution in Malwa heartland as Bardhan clasps Daljit
Bittu
S P Singh

Bathinda: The blazing
red banner formed an unmistakable background for a communist
stage, and with the hammer and sickle thrown in at this February
2 rally of CPI candidate Jagjit Singh Joga, there was no doubt
that only a Left spin will be allowed from this stage. But there
was that man, with a long beard and a long chequered past, whose
presence on the stage triggered rumblings among the crowd.
For twenty years, the Sikh militants and
the communists were two different twains, never shall they meet
under any political paradigm. But evolution of politics and
political aspirations has a logic which brings together seeming
rivals not only on the same platform, but also along similar
political articulation.
Many in Punjab were shocked when Akali Dal
(Amritsar) senior vice president Bhai Daljit Singh Bittu
sauntered on to the CPI stage, his 100 supporters in tow, and
sat besides CPI secretary general A.B. Bardhan, former state
secretary Joginder Dayal, incumbent state secretary Jagroop
Singh, CPI(M) state secretary Balwant Singh and an extended
Left's top brass. The tension in the Leftist hearts was
palpable, of course. No one knew what Bittu may have to say.
After all, the Sikh militancy movement had
witnessed the Left always standing on the other side of the
fence, refusing to see the expression of genuine political
aspirations even while recognising the overly-powerful Centre
repressing regional desires.
But years have passed, and everyone grows.
Evolves.
As Bhai Daljit Singh Bittu took the mike, a
hushed silence fell upon the restive crowd. Bang in the middle
of Malwa, the two twains were meeting. "Indian society, India's
population, India's culture is a story of diversity. There are
diverse political colours, diverse cultural consciousnesses,
diverse aspirations. Then why is the politics of this country
being conducted in a narrowly defined line of uniformity?"
This made sense, but Bittu was to
articulate the point further. "The issue of alliance is not just
an electoral problem. The UPA and the NDA are shameless enough
to actually state in public that they were facing compulsions of
alliance politics. Firstly, the alliance is a compulsion for
them; then their actions are compulsions of the alliance.
Clearly, this is not an alliance of conviction," he said.
"What the Indian people must understand,
what the Left and others desirous to breakout of the death clasp
of Congress and the BJP must realise, is that an alliance is an
expression of diversity and must be borne out of conviction, not
compulsion. We have many cultural differences. We have different
traditions, different histories, different memories, and
different perspectives on many issues. The politics must have
space for expression of this diversity and the politics of
alliance of conviction is the way forward for this expression,"
Bittu said, striking a chord with the crowd as well as the Left
brass.
He said even if one party was to
theoretically, or in reality, get a majority, the ruling
structure at must reflect the diversity which only an alliance
can provide.
"We have come a long way when the will of
the ruler used to decide the thought of the masses. Yatha
Raja Tatha Praja is an outdated concept and it is time we
move towards a Yatha Praja, Tatha Raja line of polity.
The rulers would have to mirror the reality; the reality can no
more be tweaked to the will of the rulers," Bittu said. He
hailed the way the alliance in West Bengal was being run.
The moment he took his seat after appealing
to the crowd to vote for candidates of the third front, Bardhan
moved forward to sit beside him, the Left leaders hailed his
ideas and Bittu had accomplished what many had thought was near
impossible -- an articulation of Sikh aspirations in terms which
others not only accept but also appreciate.
"Evolution of thought is a two way process.
I was sure that even as my own thoughts have evolved, the
communists and many others would also have grown to understand
things better," Bittu told me later over the phone after the
Bathinda tęte-ŕ-tęte with the Leftists.
He
said his experience of having the lunch that day with the Left
leaders, including Bardhan, was more educative. "I can't imagine
a Badal or an Amarinder stopping by a roadside dhaba and having
a lunch just as a common man does, but for Bardhan and rest of
his comrades, this was just the way life is lived," he said.
Political lessons come in many forms. CPI rallies and dhabas
could be equally educative..
February 9, 2007

Print this article
|
| |
 |
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
This Land of
Ours |
|
| |
Doaba Has A Dream
—
It Is To Run Away
Palahi – It Takes A Village And
Its Stories To Prove A Point
A Poor, Raped, Murdered Girl is Up
Against Wto, Fashion Shows
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
Spice of Politics |
|
| |
Oye tu bahar nikal…
Bitter Amarinder-Badal polity
leads to competitive rediscovery of Longowal
Kakoo-Tikkoo di Congress Gaddi
Chugs into 2004
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
People - An
Off Tangent View |
|
| |
Play The Shehnai, a Bharat Ratna has
died!
Myth is the Man Mason, pick
pocket, story teller, painter, folk lore expert, and
then, `Professor Kazak'
Footloose darwesh Satyarthi is dead, Lak Tunnu Tunnu will ring in heavens |
|
| |
|
|
| |
Across Radcliffe |
|
| |
Pakistan
wants to trade? Fine, I have my half-brick! When can we
start?
Bindi goes with
burqa,
Sufi with
Kaanta laga
Cry Freedom, It’s Same-to-Same
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
Ballot
Field |
|
| |
Smooth, peaceful, meaningless, and 72
per centChandigarh:
In the season of assassination of sanity, abuse masquerading
as election campaigning...more
Political revolution in Malwa
heartland as Bardhan clasps Daljit Bittu
The blazing
red banner formed an unmistakable background for a communist
stage, and with the hammer and sickle...more
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
Punjab's
Religio-Politics |
|
| |
Return to the word, the swords can
wait
His last wish: a visit to Golden
Temple
Polling In Badal Fiefdom:
Mirroring A Rear View
|
|
| |
Cinema~Books~Life |
|
| |
A soul for ‘city of stones’
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|