Thursday, July 24, 2008

Omar Abdullah keeps the hope alive




What we gained out of the special Parliament session



The two-day Parliament session, as we predicted on July 19, turned out to be among the most memorable in the history of independent Indian politics. Unfortunately, it is being remembered for all the wrong reasons: the brazen display of wads of notes by three BJP MPs and soaring tempers coupled with volley of verbal onslaught clouded the session, which was convened to discuss if we as a nation are willing to go ahead with the Indo-US Civilian Nuclear Agreement.

However, I for once, would remember this for variety of other reasons. And one among them is an impassioned speech by young and dynamic Omar Abdullah which left an indelible mark on my heart. It also left me reassured that there are few incredible sparks amid the dim and gloom of Indian politics which will eventually define the future of our polity.

Abdullah, who was assigned to speak at a critical time when a rampaging group of NDA MPs were taking the House by storm over the currency ‘scandal’, stood firm and began aptly by taking a swipe at them and asking them to give “us a voice” in a direct reference to the people and place he represented. And next few moments in that historic session belonged to this 30-year-old J&K National Conference MP from Srinagar, perhaps the most memorable for the leader himself who has been in public domain for last 10 years now.

The beauty of Abdullah’s speech lies in the fact that besides being cogent, fervent and precise, it touched upon a whole range of political issues and left a lasting impact on not only his constituency but also on a whole generation of Indian youth who pin their hope on leaders like him. He attacked the BJP and the Left, made an ardent plea for the Nuclear Agreement and argued why it was not anti-Muslim as was being made out, made a case for Kashmiris who toil hard every year to ensure success of Amarnath Yatra and rubbished Opposition claims that neither Muslims were opposed to the Nuclear Agreement nor the Agreement was anti-Muslim.

His speech had conviction, maturity, strong political messages and logical and factual prowess.

“I am a Muslim and I am an Indian and I see no distinction between the two. I don’t know why should I fear the nuclear deal. It is a deal between two countries which, I hope, will become two equals in the future,” said Abdullah, who it seems was aptly nominated Global Leader for Tomorrow by the World Economic Forum in 2000-01. He further said, “The enemies of Indian Muslims are not America or deals like these. The enemies are the same as the enemies of all those who are poor — poverty, hunger, lack of development and the absence of a voice.”

Taking a dig at the Left, Abdullah said, “Today, the Left is telling me that all secular parties should stand with the BJP to bring down this government. The same Left treated me like a political untouchable when I was with the NDA” and added articulating his acts of political rights and wrongs, “I am not a member of the UPA and don’t aspire to be one. I made a mistake to be with the NDA, especially after Gujarat riots happened. My conscience had asked me to quit NDA but I didn’t. My conscience has still not forgiven me.” He had by now made a solid point. But that was not it.

In reference to LK Advani’s reference to disturbances caused during Amarnath Yatra, Abdullah said, “Until the day there is even a single Muslim in Kashmir, from Srinagar to Amarnath, the Amarnath yatra will not be allowed to stop.”

The tall Abdullah had emerged taller at the end of his speech. In the days ahead, when political situation is likely to remain fluid, one would expect Abdullah is catapulted into bigger roles and assigned bigger challenges.

Politics will remain murky, it seems, but upright politicians like Omar Abdullah can ensure the spillover does not stink in the long run. One hopes.


Note: Some other highlights of the session were speeches of Rahul Gandhi, Lalu Yadav and AIMIM’s Asaduddin Owaisi. We shall come back on these later.

1 comment:

sashee said...

"what we gained out of special Parliment session". No news TV channel or news paper that covered the two day event in full view was able to bring to us the HOPE that we Indians want to have. This article is so refreshing in its views. Yes, Mr Omar Abdullah was best and honest in his "to the point speech" and one can only realise ( people who donot follow or analyse parliamnet session) this through reading this article.