Over past several decades, the liberal and progressive members of Bengali intelligentsia have hailed Swami Vivekananda, Rabindranath Tagore, and Amartya Sen as their icons, but have looked at Shyama Prasad as an outlier. Looking at the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) electoral domination and the sincerity with which Modi-Amit Shah leadership wants the BJP to dethrone Mamata Banerjee and decimate Trinamool Congress (TMC) in upcoming state elections, it is apparent that Shyama Prasad will become a dominant political and intellectual icon of Bengal, and rest of India in the coming years. This would also help the BJP conquer India’s Eastern frontier. This tectonic shift of India’s ideology under Modi could encourage political commentators to change the old saying from, “What Bengal thinks today, India thinks tomorrow” to “What Gujarat thinks today, India thinks tomorrow.” While the two Gujarati politicians -- Modi and Shah -- are going to shape Indian politics for better or worse; Shyama Prasad will find greater adulation in the unfolding political narrative of the Hindu Right of Indian politics.