Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
India

Modi's Religious Beliefs Helped Shape His Political Views

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Mar, 2015 02:27 PM
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi's religious beliefs helped shape his political views and he has no desire to jettison Hindu nationalist ideology, says a new book and notes that Modi risks alienating a section of his supporters if he allows the more extreme elements of Hindutva to influence governance.
     
    The book, "The Modi effect: Inside Narendra Modi's campaign to transform India" (Hodder&Stoughton; pp 352; 25 pounds (hardcover) 14.99 pounds (paperback) by British writer, broadcaster and commentator Lance Price, says that Modi's success in last year's Lok Sabha elections can be compared to that of landslides secured by former British prime ministers Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair.
     
    The book says that in Britain three leaders have secured landslides since the Second World War: Clement Attlee, Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair.
     
    "Their majorities in parliament were far larger that Mr. Modi's in 2014, but while each left a permanent legacy behind them, none was able to defy the swing of the political pendulum forever. Indian politics is far more fragmented than Britain's; by winning as convincingly as he (Modi) did, his success at the polls deserved to be compared with theirs."
     
    The book says that Modi, during his campaign, offered the vision of a different kind of politics in which choices are made on the basis of policies and values and not accidents of birth or religion.
     
    Price, a former BBC correspondent and a former director of communications of the Labour Party, says that BJP may not have been willing or able to resist the pull of uglier kind of politics altogether but a large number of voters were evidently attracted by the promise of a different way of doing things.
     
    The book says that for people who set a high store by the liberal values of free expression, diversity and religious tolerance, the Modi campaign and the first few months of his government produced ample grounds of concern.
     
    "Tony Blair, for whom I worked, was a devout Christian but whenever the teachings of the church came into conflict with the policies he believed to be right, he followed his own political instincts and not the dictates of his religion."
     
    "And yes, Narendra Modi's religious beliefs clearly do help to shape his political views. But to judge from the first 10 months, there has been no evidence since he became prime minister of any impact on policy that is remotely comparable, for example, to the damaging influence of fundamental Christianity on the administration of President George W. Bush," the book says.
     
    Modi assumed office last May after leading his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to its first full-majority victory.
     
    The book, released Saturday, looks at Modi's rise to power, his mass appeal despite the controversies surrounding him and the role he will play on the international stage. Based on "exclusive access" to Modi, his ministers and advisers, it tells the inside story of his much talked-about campaign for the Lok Sabha elections.
     
    Price says that if Modi was to completely jettison the Hindu nationalist ideology that he grew up with he wouldn't last very long.
     
    "He would not do that and as far as I can tell, he has no desire to. But if allows the more extreme elements of Hindutva to influence the way he governs to any significant degree then he risks alienating those who believe that his commitment to build a modern India reflects real Modi," the book says.
     
    It says that Modi has set a very high bar for himself and for the country.
     
    "If he can continue to keep his more fundamentalist supporters in check and if he is able to demonstrate that India's future economic and social development can be advanced both quickly and fairly, without putting the interests of any one community over another, he would have achieved a great deal."
     
    The book says Modi has, time and again, demonstrated a will to succeed that has overcome all the hurdles placed in his path.
     
    "In his long career he has been demonised, shunned, dismissed and condemned. But perhaps the biggest mistake his enemies have made is to underestimate him. He has now earned a place in history," says the book.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Uber banned, 'rapist driver' sent to police custody

    Uber banned, 'rapist driver' sent to police custody
    Three days after one of its drivers raped a woman commuter, "all activities" of global cab company Uber were banned in Delhi Monday and the accused...

    Uber banned, 'rapist driver' sent to police custody

    Modi, Mukesh Ambani top Yahoo India's 2014 search list

    Modi, Mukesh Ambani top Yahoo India's 2014 search list
    Online Indians were most fascinated in 2014 by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's reforms and his style, Yahoo India said in its 2014 Year in Review (YIR) report....

    Modi, Mukesh Ambani top Yahoo India's 2014 search list

    Pakistan violates ceasefire on LoC

    Pakistan violates ceasefire on LoC
    Pakistan again violated the bilateral ceasefire on the Line of Control (LoC) Monday by resorting to unprovoked firing at Indian positions in Poonch....

    Pakistan violates ceasefire on LoC

    Most CMs back Modi on alternative to plan panel; Congress, TNC oppose

    Most CMs back Modi on alternative to plan panel; Congress, TNC oppose
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi's call for replacing the Planning Commission with a suitable institution found support from "most" chief ministers Sunday...

    Most CMs back Modi on alternative to plan panel; Congress, TNC oppose

    Delhi Woman Raped, Allegedly by Uber Cab Driver

    Delhi Woman Raped, Allegedly by Uber Cab Driver
    A 25-year-old woman was allegedly raped by a cab driver when she was returning home in Delhi after completing her shift at a Gurgaon-based finance company, police said Saturday.

    Delhi Woman Raped, Allegedly by Uber Cab Driver

    Will Saffron Warriors Trip Up Modi?

    Will Saffron Warriors Trip Up Modi?
    It is perhaps in the natural order of things that when a party vanquishes its opponents, its nemesis emerges from within its own ranks. This is what appears to be happening in the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

    Will Saffron Warriors Trip Up Modi?