Atal Bihari Vajpayee: An
apostle of peace - humanity personified
(Awarded Bharat Ratna)
A 28-year old Dhoti-Kurta clad young man was jostling
to push his blanket-wrapped baggage into the unreserved compartment of a
passenger train at Delhi Railway station on May 8, 1953.
The scene was a send off to Dr. Syma Prasad Moookerjee, founder of the
Bharatiya Jana Sangh (predecessor of the present day Bharatiya Janata Party),
on a mission to enter Jammu & Kashmir defying the entry-permit order of the
government & demanding full integration of the state into the Indian Union.
On the call of duty was a journalist-turned hitherto unfamiliar
political secretary to Dr. Mookerjee and his name was Atal Bihari Vajpayee.
Dr. Mookerjee was arrested on May 10, 1953 on the J&K border while
entering the state refusing to obtain an entry-permit and was taken to Srinagar
jail.
He sent his aide Vajpayee back to Delhi with a message for the party
rank and file to continue the agitation against what he then termed as:
“Ek desh mein Do Vidhan, Do Pradhan, and Do Nishan Nahin Chalenge “(in
one country there can’t be two constitutions, two prime ministers & two
flags).
Dr. Mookerjee died under mysterious circumstances while in custody in
Srinagar on June 23, 1953. And young Vajpayee, with his oratorical eloquence
relentlessly went on to spread his political mentor’s message across the
country and made an indelible mark as a debutant on the political scene of
independent India.
Atalji entered the Lok Sabha from Balrampur in UP in the second general
elections in 1957 and his maiden speech earned him laurels from many
contemporary veteran parliamentarians, including the then prime minister
Jawaharlal Nehru who, while introducing Vajpayee to a visiting foreign
dignitary once said “ this young man one day will become the country’s prime
minister”.
Atalji was unsparing in his criticism of Nehru in the Rajya Sabha when
National Conference leader Sheikh Abdullah was released from house-arrest in
Delhi on April 8, 1964 and was allowed to visit Pakistan-occupied Kashmir.
But the same Vajpayee paid glowing tributes to the departed prime
minister in the upper house when Nehru died on May 27, 1964. Respect for
political adversaries has always been a unique feature of Vajpayee’s
multi-faceted personality.
Vajpayee remained a member of parliament for 47 years, eleven time
elected to the Lok Sabha, and twice to the Rajya Sabha. But the issue of Jammu
& Kashmir always remained foremost in his mind. He was a staunch critic of
Nehru’s Jammu & Kashmir policy. He was elected to the Lok Sabha from
Lucknow in Uttar Pradesh for six consecutive terms.
A poet by heart, Atalji articulated poetry as one of the means of
expressing himself in any given situation. He would often recite one of his
poems during the course of his speeches to convey his message for the occasion
and enthral his audience.
Atalji inherited this talent from his father Krishna Bihari Vajpayee and
practiced poetry writing and recitation since childhood by accompanying him at Kavi
Sammelans in the erstwhile princely state of Gwalior where he was born
in a middle class family of a school teacher.
Compilation of his poetry titled “Meri Ekyaavan Kavitayein” has
been very popular. Famous film producer Yash Chopra directed an album “Antarnaad”
based on some of Atal ji’s classic poems which were composed by Ghazal maestro
Jagjit Singh with super star Shahrukh Khan articulating the theme.
One of his poems on Jammu & Kashmir “Mastak Nahi Jhukega”
sums up India’s position on the issue of Jammu & Kashmir.
As external affairs minister in the 1977 Janata Party government,
Vajpayee pursued the policy of friendly relations with India’s neighbours,
including Pakistan, on the principle of peaceful co-existence & mutual
respect. His famous quote “you can change friends but not
your neighbours” went on to become a dictum in the Indian foreign office
establishment.
Resolving all the outstanding issues with Pakistan, including the
issue of Jammu & Kashmir issue in a peaceful manner through bilateral
dialogue without any third party intervention was Vajpayee’s Mantrawhen
he became the prime minister, first for 13 days in 1996, then for 13 months in
1998 and again for a full five-year term in 1999.
The successful nuclear test “Operation Shakti” in Pokhran on May
13, 1998, was Atal ji’s strategic master stroke which he defended as a
“deterrent” rather than a weapon of mass destruction. He put India in the
league of the world’s elite nuclear club yet announced moratorium on future
testing.
He carried his message of peace to Pakistan during a bus journey
to Lahore on February 19, 1999.
Vajpayee made it a point to visit to Minar-e-Pakistan where
he re-affirmed India’s commitment to the existence of Pakistan.
He reached out to the people of Pakistan in a passionate speech at the
governor’s house in Lahore telecast live both in Pakistan & India.
Atalji extended a hand of friendship on the basis of reciprocity and
mutual trust and called for collective fight against poverty in the Indian
subcontinent devoid of terrorism and drug-trafficking.
Vajpayee’s emotional speech from the bottom of his heart made Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif to comment “Vajpayee Saheb, ab to aap Pakistan mein
bhi election jeet sakte haein (Mr. Vajpayee now you can win elections
even in Pakistan)
Vajpayee also signed
a Lahore Declaration with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on February 21, 1999,
wherein Pakistan agreed to resolve all bilateral issues between the two
countries, including the issue of Jammu & Kashmir in a peaceful manner and
through dialogue and to promote people to people contact.
The Delhi–Lahore Bus
Service Sada-e-Sarhad (Call of the Frontier) was
launched as a symbol of the efforts of the Vajpayee government to promote
peaceful and friendly relations with Pakistan on the basis of reciprocity.
Atalji did now allow
the bus service to be terminated even when Pakistan army chief Parvez Musharraf
launched an attack in Kargil between May & July, 1999, which the Indian
armed forces successfully repulsed forcing the Pakistani army to vacate the
occupied hills in the region.
However, the service
had to be suspended during the heightened tension between the two neighbours in
the aftermath of the Pakistan-ISI sponsored terrorist attack on the Indian
Parliament on December 13, 2001. It was restored on July 16, 2003 when Pakistan
assured the Indian government as well as the international community that
Islamabad would not allow its territory to be used for terrorists’ activities.
There have been many
ups and downs in the Indo-Pak relations in the last more than fifteen years but
the Delhi-Lahore bus remains a symbol of the desire of the people of two
countries to maintain people-to-people contacts.
Atal Ji’s doctrine of peace, progress and prosperity in Jammu
& Kashmir in the spirit of Insaniyat (Humanity) , Jamhuriyat (Democracy)
and Kashmiriyat (Identity of the people of Kashmir) was universally acclaimed
by all segments across political spectrum in the state, including the extremist
elements in the valley and perhaps the Kashmiris across the Line of Control
(LOC) in the Pak-occupied Kashmir.
All the setbacks to his dialogue initiatives, including Kargil conflict,
high- jacking of an Indian Airlines plane to Kandhar and terrorist attack on
the Indian Parliament, notwithstanding, Vajpayee did not allow the peace
process to derail despite serious provocations by the Pakistan army and the
ISI.
His NDA government continued to encourage confidence building measures
and people-to-people contact in the larger interest of peace and tranquility in
the sub-continent, an essential ingredient of progress and development of the
region where one-third of the population lives below the poverty line.
And now the NDA-2 under the stewardship of India’s most popular and
dynamic leader Prime Minister Narendra Modi has embarked upon the mission of
accomplishing the unfinished agenda of Vajpayee for a terrorism-free prosperous
South Asia.
Prime Minister Modi picking up the thread where Vajpayee had left in
matters of India’s pro-active policy of improving relations with all immediate
neighbours was on display at the very outset of the NDA-2 when heads of all the
SAARC member countries were invited to witness Narendra Bhai’s swearing
–in-ceremony at the forecourt of majestic Rashtrapati Bhavan in Lutyens Delhi.
Later he chose Bhutan and Nepal for his maiden foreign visits as prime
minister in the SARC spirit.
Narenda Modi, who has always held Vajpayee in highest esteem and
considered him his role model, never misses a chance to eulogize the
larger-than-life towering personality of this living legend.
Speaking in the central hall of parliament on the historic occasion of
his unanimous election as leader of the newly elected BJP parliamentary party
on May 20, 2014, Narandra Modi didn’t forget to remember Vajpayee when he said
“ Yadi Atalji ka swasthay anumati deta aur woh aaj hamare beech
hotein to sone par suhaga hota “ ( if Atal ji’s health permitted and
he would have been present here, it would have been like the icing on the cake)
.
Prime Minister Modi too has demonstrated his deep affection for the
people of Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh and has paid several visits to all the
three region in a short span of six months.
During his election rallies in the state, Narendra Modi promised to the
people that his government would fulfil the dream of Atal Bihari Vajpayee and
bring peace and prosperity in the state based on “Insaniyat, Jamhuriyat aur
Kashmiriyat” ( Humanity, democracy & Identity of the people of
Kashmir).
Modi, during his visits to the state,
always mentioned that Atalji through his three-point Kashmir-doctrine had made
a special place in the hearts of Kashmiris and ignited hope in every Kashmiri
youth for a better future.
"Our Mantra is
only development, development and development," he said, adding "I
will return your trust in me with interest by ensuring full fledged development
in J&K."
Prime Minister Modi has assured the state , "It is my wish and I will come here again & again to fulfil Atalji’s dream”
Prime Minister Modi has assured the state , "It is my wish and I will come here again & again to fulfil Atalji’s dream”
The Narendra Modi government’s decision
to observe Atalji’s 90th birth day on December 25 as “Good
Governance Day” is perhaps the most befitting tribute the younger generation of
his party could pay to its friend, philosopher & guide over the last so
many decades.
The media reports that Prime Minister
Modi will be announcing Bharat Ratna for Atalji on his birthday have been
welcomed by political leaders across the party lines. Perhaps it has been
long overdue.
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