UP Election 2022: Chunaav Pe Charcha | EJ In-depth: Appeasing Gods for Votes- the Ayodhya Route

Updated : Dec 11, 2021 11:15
|
Editorji News Desk

Appeasing Gods to win wars is a practice as old as time

Ancient Egyptians, Romans, Aztecs, Celts- societies, spread across the continents, over centuries have knocked on God’s door to ask for help, to get work done

And if the folktales, the stories and the rumours are to be believed, now and then Gods have answered the door for their favourites

This practice of divine appeasement, for some time now, has been the norm in Uttar Pradesh’s politics

For example, it is without contention, that a place like Ayodhya, the seat of spirituality on the banks of the Saryu river is talked about more for its political importance than theological reasons

Since the 1980s, Ayodhya has remained a pivot in UP politics and polls. For the BJP, since its resolution in 1989 to construct a Ram Mandir at the site of Babri Masjid, Ayodhya remained the focal point of its poll campaigns in the years after the Babri Masjid demolition. It slipped into a footnote in the late 2000s as the law of diminishing returns kicked in

 


But with the Supreme Court ruling in favour of the Ram Mandir in November 2019, Ayodhya has again occupied the pride of place in not just BJP's, but every political party's political scheme of things in the run-up to the UP elections


Almost all parties have used the holy city as a launch pad of sorts for their campaign for the upcoming state polls

 

Prime Minister Narendra Modi himself performed the ‘bhoomi pujan’ on August 5, 2020 for the Ram temple

 


Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath frequently visits the holy town and has taken the Dussehra and Diwali celebrations to a whole new level in his tenure. From inviting foreign dignitaries to Guinness world record by lighting over 6 lakh lamps on the banks of Saryu, Yogi has done his fair share of appeasing the Gods

 

Not to be left behind in the race, opposition parties, too, are doing their political parikrama

 


Mayawati’s Bahujan Samaj Party, hoping to repeat its 2007 success by harnessing its ‘Dalits-Brahmins’ formula, began its ‘Brahmin Sammelan’ from Ayodhya in July. Party's Brahmin face Satish Chandra Misra started the party’s campaign by offering prayers at the Ram Janmabhoomi

 


The Samajwadi Party too used Ayodhya to launch its campaign with state unit chief Naresh Uttam participating in ‘khet bachaao, rozgaar bachaao‘ event on September 3. Party chief Akhilesh Yadav also said he would visit the temple with his family after its opens for public.

 


The Congress, that never associated itself with the cause of the Ram Mandir, changed its stance after the Supreme Court’s verdict. Ahead of the bhoomi pujan by the PM, Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi, called the laying of foundation a "celebration of national unity".

 


Even the new entrants in the UP battleground are taking the Ayodhya route to launch their political fortunes

 


AIMIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi began his party’s campaign with a public meeting at Rasulabad in Ayodhya on September 7. The venue was strategically chosen as it is near Dhannipur where a mosque is coming up as per the apex court judgement

 


AAP leaders Manish Sisodia and Sanjay Singh offered special prayers at the Ram Janmabhoomi and Hanumangarhi temple in Ayodhya as they launched the party's campaign for the 2022 polls

 

It isn’t just Ayodhya though. Political pilgrims have also touched PM’s parliamentary constituency and another holy site Varanasi 

All this worshipping has made the opposition a target for accusations of ‘soft hindutva’


But practising religion is not communalism. Targeting minorities by using religion as a crutch, excluding them from an inclusive national narrative, that fits more into the definition of communalism

Moreover, as long as constitutional morality prevails, asking the Gods for electoral favours does not diminish democratic stoutness

Whether this practice of divine appeasement stems from the abundance of religion in the state, or the abundance is maintained through the practice, is a topic for philosophical debate

But what isn’t a debate, is the obvious political strategy behind the religious stunts

The temple-runs and holy-site hopping is not for the Gods but for the voters

When the political parties ask the voters to vote in the name of their Gods, the voters comply

But if the manifesto promises go kaput, the governance dilapidates or the policies fail - who is to be held accountable?

The parties, the voters or the Gods?

akhilesh YadavUttar PradeshYogi AdityanathMayawatiAyodhyaMathuraUP 2022UP Assembly Election 2022

Recommended For You

editorji | Elections 2024

Was this Shashi Tharoor's last election? Congress leader reveals

editorji | Elections 2024

What lies ahead for AIADMK after Lok Sabha debacle?

editorji | Elections 2024

Meet GenZ candidates set to become India’s youngest MPs

editorji | Elections 2024

Odisha's chief ministerial race: five BJP stalwarts in contention

editorji | Elections 2024

Modi's swearing-in ceremony, India to invite top leaders of neighbouring countries: report