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Modi As PM At AMU Is A Humble Act Of Hindutva, And Not An Aberration From It

  • A prime minister must necessarily engage with, and address, all cultural streams present in India. Especially if he belongs to the Hindutva fold.

Aravindan NeelakandanDec 22, 2020, 04:02 PM | Updated 04:02 PM IST
Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed AMU centenary celebrations today (22 December 2020).

Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed AMU centenary celebrations today (22 December 2020).


Now that Prime Minister Narendra Modi is speaking at the centenary celebrations of the Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) as I write, social media might soon be filled with abuses against Modi — not only from the leftists, Islamists and other usual Modi-haters but also from the so-called ‘Hindutvaites’, the cyber-warrior variety.

Before you get to behold them, let us just spare a minute to read this.

I come from Tamil Nadu. There are two Dravidian parties here: one is Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) and the other All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK).

The DMK leaders make it a point to never wish Hindus on their festivals. It was okay as an ideological stand of the party, but even when the DMK came to power, the leaders continued to followed this. So, in Tamil Nadu, the land of Vedas and Dharma, we have had a chief minister who would not extend greetings on Diwali, Vijaya Dashami, Ganesh Chaturti etc.

On the other hand, the AIADMK founded by M G Ramachandran always made it a point to wish all people during their festivals and joyous occasions, whether the party was in power or not.

In the general mind of Tamil Nadu, in its collective psyche, there is a perception. It is always there — irrespective of who wins. And it was reflected in director Mani Ratnam's Iruvar. Deep down the Tamil psyche, DMK is the villain, the bad guy and the AIADMK is the hero.

The Hindu mind in particular and spontaneous human nature in general loves flexibility to an extent.


It is true that the role played by Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) in the history of India is not an honourable one. It is true it was the epicentre of the Pakistan movement and continues to be a fertile ground for memetic breeding of Islamists one finds in organisations like Popular Front of India (PFI).

Yet AMU is part of Indian history. So it is only proper that Narendra Modi as the prime minister of India participates in its centenary celebrations.

In a way, this is also a continuation of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) culture.

The February 1989 issue of Manthan — the official magazine of the Deendayal Research Institute (DRI) featured as its cover story: "A long chat with some bright young men of Aligarh Muslim University”.

K R Malkani, the editor of Manthan, had interacted with students of AMU who actually belonged to SIO — Student Islamic Organisation.

In the question-answer session between the sides, the last two questions and the answers that Sri Malkani gave are interesting and relevant even today.

To the question if he believed in god, Malkani answered:

Then the final question from a student was on the future of Islam and if Malkani saw a bright future for Islam.


Narendra Modi , who belongs to the same family to which Malkani also belonged, now participates in the centenary celebrations of the AMU, as the prime minister of India. And that is a great civilisational statement about Bharat.

Modi also belongs to this universal vision, and values, that Malkani spoke about to the students of AMU three decades ago, and Hindutva is this universal vision; not the parochial ugliness that animates the Dravidianism of the DMK.


Let us not confuse our narrow conceptions with that eternal life stream of this nation and civilisation from time immemorial — Hindutva.

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