WORTH GOING THROUGH
Suhel Seth
Posted online: Oct 19, 2008 at 2338 hrs
Let me begin with a
set of disclosures: I have perhaps written more articles against Modi
and his handling of the post-Godhra scenario than most people have; I
have called him a modern-day Hitler and have always said that Godhra
shall remain an enduring blemish not just on him but on India's
political class.
I still believe that what happened in Gujarat
during the Godhra riots is something we as a nation will pay a heavy
price for. But the fact is that time has moved on. As has Narendra Modi.
He is not the only politician in India who has been accused of
communalism. It is strange that the whole country venerates the Congress
Party as the secular messiah but it was that party that presided over
the riots in 1984 in which over 3,500 Sikhs died: thrice the number
killed in Gujarat.
The fact of the matter
is that there is no better performer than Narendra Modi in India's
political structure. Three weeks ago, I had gone to Ahmedabad to address
the YPO and I thought it would be a good opportunity to catch up with
Modi. I called him the evening before and I was given an appointment for
the very day I was getting into Ahmedabad. And it was not some official
meeting but instead one at his house.
As frugal as the man Modi is.
And this is something that the Gandhis and Mayawatis need to learn from
Modi. There were no fawning staff members; no secretaries running
around; no hangers on…just the two of us with one servant who was there
serving tea. And what was most impressive was the passion which Modi
exuded.. The passion for development; the passion for an invigorated
Gujarat; the passion for the uplifting the living standards of the
people in his
state and the joy with which he recounted simple yet memorable
data-points. For instance, almost all of the milk consumed in Singapore
is supplied by Gujarat; or for that matter all the tomatoes that are
eaten in Afghanistan are produced in Gujarat or the potatoes that
Canadians gorge on are all farmed in Gujarat.
But it was industry
that was equally close to his heart. It was almost like a child, that
he rushed and got a coffee table book on GIFT: the proposed Gujarat
Industrial City that will come up on the banks of the Sabarmarti:
something that will put the Dubais and the Hong Kongs of this world to
shame. And while on the Sabarmati, it is Modi who has created the
inter-linking of rivers so that now the Sabarmati is no longer dry.
He then spoke about
how he was very keen that Ratan Tata sets up the Nano plant in Gujarat:
he told me how he had related the story of the Parsi Navsari priests to
Ratan and how touched Ratan was: the story is, when the Navsari priests,
(the first Parsis) landed in Gujarat, the ruler of Gujarat sent them a
glass of milk, full to the brim and said, there was no place for them:
the priests added some sugar to the milk and sent it back saying that
they would integrate beautifully with the locals and would only add
value to the state.
Narendra Modi is
clearly a man in a hurry and he has every reason to be. There is no
question in any one's mind that he is the trump card for the BJP after
Advani and Modi realises that. People like Rajnath Singh are simply weak
irritants I would imagine. He also believes that the country has no
apolitical strategy to counter terrorism and in fact he told me how he
had alerted the Prime Minister, the Home Minister and the NSA about the
impending bomb blasts in Delhi and they did not take him seriously. And
then the September 13 blasts happened! It was this resolve of Modi's
that I found very admirable. There is a clear intolerance of terrorism
and terrorists which is evident in the way the man functions; now there
are many cynics who call it minority-bashing but the truth of the matter
is that Modi genuinely means business as far as law and order
is concerned. I
left Modi's house deeply impressed with the man as Chief Minister: he
was clearly passionate and what's more deeply committed. When I sat in
the car, I asked my driver what he thought of Modi and his simple reply
was Modi is God. Before him, there was nothing. No roads, no power, no
infrastructure. . Today, Gujarat is a power surplus state. Today,
Gujarat attracts more industry than all the states put together. Today,
Gujarat is the preferred investment destination for almost every
multi-national and what's more, there is an integrity that is missing in
other states. After
I finished talking to the YPO (Young President's Organisation) members,
I asked some of them very casually, what they thought of Modi.
Strangely, this was one area there was no class differential on. They
too said he was God. But what
they also added very quickly was if India has just five Narendra Modis,
we would be a great country. I don't know if this was typical Gujarati
exaggeration or a reflection of the kind of leadership India now needs!
There
is however, no question in my mind, that his flaws apart, Narendra Modi
today, is truly a transformational leader! And we need many more like
him! The writer is Managing Partner, Counselage