On the one hand when you become the Prime Minister you have other forces acting upon you. You have international financial institutions; you have big business who wants to create a certain impression and who will insist on certain things being said. And then you have your constituency and your storm troopers who brought you to power, who are speaking a completely different language. What we have to accept that sometimes totally irreconcilable things will be said, like for example, you may say that one of the heroes of the RSS pantheon now is Dr Ambedkar. How can that be? He is a man who renounced Hinduism. Here is the last radical gesture on his part was to renounce Hinduism and become a Buddhist. But, you can say anything anytime - different things at different points.
How do you compare the current situation with when Atal Behari Vajpayee was prime minister? Attacks on Christian missionaries and churches were reported; Graham Steins and his two sons were burnt alive when Vajpayee was in power.
And the pogrom against the Muslims happened in Gujarat in 2002. The thing that must be said in order to be fair to anybody is that there is definitely a systemic problem here, when you have this first-past-the-post type of representation of democracy, that system in itself creating the need to polarize people to create these vote banks. The Congress sowed the seeds the BJP is reaping the harvest. This seed began way back, even before the RSS was formed. The discrepancy between what Tilak stood for and what Gandhi stood for. I am not a great admirer of Gandhi, as everybody knows. It's a process of history that's taking place. Why the writers and filmmakers and academics are doing is important is also because we are all constantly being constricted especially in television studios and in the media into being boxed into the BJP versus Congress equation.
Are you saying Congress and the BJP complement each other?
I think in many ways the Congress has done by night what the BJP does by day. The only difference I would say is that here is an open ideology, boldly stated, that justifies the treatment meted out to minorities, whereas the Congress does it in a sly, hypocritical way. And then, when push comes to shove, you almost get grateful for the hypocrisy, when they are just saying it out straight in the way so many of the BJP spokesmen speak, it's very terrifying. You don't know where to go from here.
Where do you think this groundswell of protests by the writers and artists is going to lead?
I don't think we should make such a big deal out of it. As I have said, awards are not the measure of our work; it's just something to do. It's like expressing solidarity with someone who is trying to do something. I don't think our consciences can be clear by returning awards or not returning awards. I do think that it's interesting that very few writers and artists have in the past taken clear political positions. I am not one of those who hasn't, so to me, when the Congress was in power, they were deploying the paramilitary in the forest of C?h?hattisgarh. They were very much part of creating the tribal vigilante movement – the Salwa Judum – which was burning and killing people. So, I am not about to say that oh, this is some very moral force here. What's happening is that it's forcing people to understand that there isn't any shelter where you say I am just a cultural person, or I am just a writer, just a poet ??– I don’t have anything to do with politics??-- because it's unspooling before you and there isn't anywhere to hide. I think that's interesting. When this government came to power many of us felt that it was going to stay in power for ten years. It all started to unravel pretty quickly – the Delhi elections were a revelation. I don't know what's going to happen in Bihar (the interview was done before the results came out). I think, it's interesting that it's a complicated country and you can't force everybody to march in line even if you threaten them.