Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
International

US media discovers a 'new Fashion icon' in Narendra Modi

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 06 Jun, 2014 09:34 PM
    From a persona non grata to a new fashion icon - that's how a stunning election victory has transformed Narendra Modi in the eyes of the American media as Washington prepares to welcome India's new prime minister, possibly in September.
     
    As if on cue, three major US publications - Time, New York Times and the Washington Post - have all written about his trademark 'Modi Kurta' as they try to "decode India's new leader" ahead of his September summit with President Barack Obama.
     
    "India's New Prime Minister Is the Country's Latest Fashion Icon," says Time suggesting "With his shortened tunic, or 'Modi Kurta,' Narendra Modi is becoming as celebrated for his style sense as he is notorious for his controversial political past."
     
    Paired "with Bvlgari shades and a Movado watch (he's got penchants for them both)," Modi's "ensemble is about as mixed as his record as a political leader, really," it said.
     
    "While his leadership of the state of Gujarat ushered in some of the most impressive economic growth the country has ever seen, questions remain over his role in a string of riots in the state in 2002 that left more than 1,000 people dead," Time said.
     
    But then it hastened to note parenthetically "He has been officially cleared of any wrongdoing.
     
     
    The New York Times sees in "Narendra Modi: A Leader Who Is What He Wears" saying "Even by the standards of a world...the image-craft of India's new prime minister, Narendra Modi - and its fashion fallout - has been something of a case study."
     
    "Indeed, even by the standards of India itself, where leaders have perhaps understood the use of clothing as a ommunication device better and longer than any of their international peers ...Mr. Modi stands out. Literally and strategically," says Time.
     
    "It all speaks to Mr. Modi's success in associating his personal style with his political platform, to the benefit of both," says the magazine.
     
    "Objectively speaking, the Modi Kurta itself does not exactly represent an extraordinary aesthetic advance; rather it symbolizes a set of values. And therein lies its allure," it adds.
     
    Probing "what Narendra Modi's fashion says about his politics," the Washington Post says: "Move aside, Michelle Obama. The world has a new fashion icon.
     
     
    "And no, it's not Vladimir Putin, despite his fitness regimen - it's India's new prime minister, Narendra Modi."
     
    "Countless articles have been written about his look, from his vast collection of hats to his iconic long tunic, the #ModiKurta. Yes, it has its own hashtag," it notes.
     
    "Although Modi has a carefully cultivated Hindu nationalist image, it doesn't mean he isn't a fan of European designers," the Post says.
     
    "His glasses are said to be Bvlgari, and his watch is Movado, two brands at odds with his traditional Indian look but in keeping with his pro-business ideology," it adds.
     
    In another piece in Time, Tunku Varadarajan dilates on how "As Narendra Modi stormed into the consciousness of the world beyond India, analysts everywhere scrambled to interpret him for their readers and viewers."
     
    Modi, he notes, has been likened to Margaret Thatcher, Ronald Reagan, Ariel Sharon, Shinzo Abe and Deng Xiaoping, Vladimir Putin as also Turkey's Islamist-democrat Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
     
     
    Meanwhile, at the State Department spokesperson Marie Harf again recalled that Obama and Secretary of State John "Kerry have both said, we look forward to welcoming the prime minister to Washington."
     
    But she had "nothing to announce on dates. I know there are a lot of reports out there about dates, but we don't have dates yet."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Election Special: Now, Punjab candidates stand vigil where EVMs stored

    Election Special: Now, Punjab candidates stand vigil where EVMs stored
    The last time this happened was 37 years ago when citizens' groups stood guard outside the rooms where the boxes containing the ballots cast in the 1977 general election - after the emergency was lifted - were stored. 

    Election Special: Now, Punjab candidates stand vigil where EVMs stored

    50 injured in Meerut communal riot

    50 injured in Meerut communal riot
    About 50 people, including a senior police officer and two media persons, were injured in a communal clash in Meerut Saturday, police said. The incident occurred around 2 p.m. in Teer Gehran area when a group of people was installing a water facilitation kiosk near a mosque.

    50 injured in Meerut communal riot

    Bollywood concert promoter convicted in US for brutal attack on ex-wife

    Bollywood concert promoter convicted in US for brutal attack on ex-wife
    An Indian-American Bollywood concert promoter in California has been convicted of aggravated mayhem for paying three men to maim his ex-wife last year, leaving her with permanent facial injuries.

    Bollywood concert promoter convicted in US for brutal attack on ex-wife

    British girl gets jail for attacking elderly Sikh man

    British girl gets jail for attacking elderly Sikh man
    The British teenaged girl who attacked an 80-year-old Sikh pensioner in a city centre in Britain's Coventry last year has been jailed for two years by the Warwick crown court.

    British girl gets jail for attacking elderly Sikh man

    Modi attacks Sonia Gandhi over 'low thought' barb

    Modi attacks Sonia Gandhi over 'low thought' barb
    Taking on Congress president Sonia Gandhi for calling him a person of "low thought", BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi Friday accused her of "stooping low" due to impending defeat in the general elections.

    Modi attacks Sonia Gandhi over 'low thought' barb

    Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Plaza coming up in Texas

    Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Plaza coming up in Texas
    A seven-foot tall bronze statue of India's freedom movement leader will be the centrepiece of the Mahatma Gandhi Memorial of North Texas with walls inscribed with some of his quotes.

    Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Plaza coming up in Texas