scorecardresearch
Wednesday, April 24, 2024
Support Our Journalism
HomeOpinionWhat’s common between APJ Abdul Kalam and Narendra Modi

What’s common between APJ Abdul Kalam and Narendra Modi

The thriving cult of APJ Abdul Kalam is a reminder of the power of hope.

Follow Us :
Text Size:

It has been a little more than four years since former President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam passed away. But his cult only seems to grow bigger in India. There is no former president, not even a celebrated scientist, who is as popularly remembered as A.P.J. Abdul Kalam.

What explains the cult of Kalam? What explains reactions like this one:

— Siddharth (@ssaig) 31 October 2019

If his religious identity was the only reason Kalam was liked, you wouldn’t see people recalling his 1998 book, India 2020. The banal book co-written with Y.S. Rajan had the usual ideas for economic development you find in endless sarkari documents. How bright were Kalam’s ideas is not the point here. We are asking why so many young people continue to be enamoured of Kalam and his words.


Also read: How this simple, God-loving Indian Muslim left behind such an enduring legacy


That is the mantra

Gayatri Mohan, a class 10 girl who aspires to be a scientist, takes the mic and asks, “Sir, I would like to hear from you a few tips for the upcoming generation to succeed in life.”

A.P.J. Abdul Kalam replies: “To succeed in life you have to do four things. Repeat with me… I will have great aim. I will continuously acquire knowledge. Number three, I will do hard work. I will persevere. I will succeed.”

“Thank you sir,” the student replies.

“Ok, that is the mantra,” Kalam says.

This is the beginning of a 15-minute video of a 2012 event where Kalam answered questions by students. It is the most-watched video related to A.P.J. Abdul Kalam on YouTube, with 14 million views.

The cult of Kalam is not about his achievements as a scientist (there are many scientists out there). It’s not about his being a former president (who remembers Pratibha Patil?). It’s not about his religious identity (Hindutva today doesn’t even need ‘good’ Muslims). The cult of Kalam is about how he became a motivational speaker for a generation of young Indians. His presidency only added to his career as a motivational author and speaker. Today, there are motivational speakers who use Kalam’s words to run their business!

As a motivational speaker, A.P.J. Abdul Kalam gave young students the most addictive psychotropic substance: hope.

Karl Marx was wrong. Religion is not the opium of the masses. Hope is the opium of the masses. As the Hindustani saying goes, the world lives on hope.

To sell a dream in 1998 that India can become a developed country by 2020, is to sell the drug of hope. To tell teenagers that they will live in a wealthy, prosperous country in the prime of their adult life is to give them a reason to strive for success. His life journey from a town in Tamil Nadu to Rashtrapati Bhavan via the nuclear programme is part of the cult, it certainly gave him the credibility a seller of hope needs.

Kalam must have loved the high it gave him to play the part of a hero. When he died of a cardiac arrest at 83 years of age, he was delivering a speech in IIM Shillong.

The cult of Kalam is not to be taken lightly. A 70-minute long audio of Gulzar reading Kalam’s autobiography in Hindi has over 5 million views. By the millions, people are watching videos with titles like, “Last eight hours of Kalam’s life”, “APJ Abdul Kalam’s top 10 rules for success”, “Bangla motivational video on APJ Abdul Kalam,” and so on.

And you have to see the comments on these videos to believe them. “I miss you sir,” writes Prashant Anand. “I am unlucky that I can’t meet him,” writes Ameya Bhagwat. “The gem of modern India,” writes Sachin Dubey. “A person with zero haters,” writes Monster Z. “It’s being 4yrs ago he left 🙁 he is the real leader no one can equal to him even for 1000 yrs,” writes Devraj YNWA. “I request youtube to remove the dislike button on this video,” writes Karthikeyan Mitran. “I don’t know why tears roll down when I hear your voice, Sir…,” writes Prathyush. On that Gulzar video, the popular demand is to make Kalam’s autobiography part of the school syllabi. You will find such comments pouring in all over the internet even today, many from people who say they were inspired by Kalam in their youth.


Also read: The good Muslim-bad Muslim binary is as old as Nehru


Many flavours of the same drug

As the cult of Kalam keeps growing since his death, he is seen as a modern-day saint. Like babas and gurus, like Osho or Sri Sri Ravi Shankar. Babas and gurus, incidentally, sell the same drug: hope (with spiritual tadka). Spiritual leaders create vast empires out of selling hope.

There’s another person who made a cult figure out of himself by selling hope: Narendra Modi. This is the political flavour of the same drug. Just as Kalam used to package his drug as ‘India 2020’, Modi does it as ‘India 2022’ and now that 2022 is close, it’s been re-packaged as ‘$5-trillion economy by 2024’. Every alternate Sunday, Modi sells a heated dose of hope-drug on his radio programme, Mann Ki Baat. We Indians love waiting for Godot.

The more destitute you are, the more you need hope. It is by selling hope that Modi wins votes even though he’s actually destroying hope by driving the economy into a structural slowdown. Those who think the BJP’s growing hegemony over Indian politics shall be countered by propping up an unnatural alliance in Maharashtra, should read the comments on A.P.J. Abdul Kalam’s YouTube videos. Defeating Modi needs the selling of a new and improved version of the hope-drug.


Also read: 40 things Modi has promised to achieve by 2022


Kalam and secular politics

A retired scientist hailed for his role in the 1998 nuclear tests, Kalam was the president from 2002 to 2007. The Atal Bihari Vajpayee government didn’t have the numbers in Parliament to make anyone they liked the president of India. Kalam was not the first choice of either the BJP, or the RSS, or the Congress. His name for Rashtrapati Bhavan was proposed by Mulayam Singh Yadav of the Samajwadi Party to break the deadlock over the presidential elections.

Many Left-liberals and Muslims have long seen APJ Abdul Kalam as a kind of secular betrayal. He came across as ‘culturally’ more Hindu than Muslim — just how the RSS wants Indian Muslims to be. In a majoritarian India, it is felt, Muslims have to deny their Muslim-ness and, as if that’s not enough, appear to be ‘culturally Hindu’ and recognise that their forefathers had converted from the Hindu faith, out of either choice or, perhaps, duress.

For Left-liberals, Kalam seemed to legitimise the Hindutva government of Vajpayee, particularly as he became president soon after the Gujarat pogrom in 2002. (Kalam had something to say about that later.)

There may be some truth to this argument, but that does not fully explain the mass cult of Kalam among youth from north to south India. Kalam’s political critics are unfair to him. Had he been made president by a Congress government, they would have hailed him as a symbol of Indian syncretism and secularism. In fact, the ever-rising cult of Kalam shows us how a mix of hope and inclusive nationalism can wade through Hindu-Muslim polarisation.

Only the 23rd most-watched video about Kalam on YouTube is about his religious identity. The 8-year old animated educational video, targeted at children, has 2.4 million views.

It’s based on his poem, A lesson for my teacher, about a childhood memory of religious discrimination. A school teacher asks a Muslim cap-wearing Kalam not to sit in class next to his best friend, son of the head priest of the Shiva temple. The head priest gets to know this and tells the school-teacher to let Kalam sit next to his son, and even makes the teacher apologise to Kalam.

Subscribe to our channels on YouTube, Telegram & WhatsApp

Support Our Journalism

India needs fair, non-hyphenated and questioning journalism, packed with on-ground reporting. ThePrint – with exceptional reporters, columnists and editors – is doing just that.

Sustaining this needs support from wonderful readers like you.

Whether you live in India or overseas, you can take a paid subscription by clicking here.

Support Our Journalism

18 COMMENTS

  1. How much money did bjp gave you .
    Have some shame. media has literally sold india to bjp and they are the main reason of present situation of our country.

  2. With each article Mr. Vij brings greater faith in our conviction that he is just an ideologically indoctrinated mediocre journalist. Quite unfortunately, he harbours big ambitions. Maybe the magic of Abdul Kalam Sir.

    • You are right. On one hand he says good muslims is not what hindutva wants and in the other hand he says Kalam is the type of person which RSS wants. Such low life this man have. He is not sure what he wants to convey.

  3. I have a problem with Kalam not because he became president under BJP rule but because of his role in Pokhran-II: an exercise totally unnecessary from scientific, technological or military point of view which served only to bolster the political capital of BJP. To blindly lend one’s scientific talents to war-games is not something to admire.

  4. Modi can never be equated to Kalam who never paraded his poor background. All politicians in particular BJP including Modi, Chandrababu Naidu and many others for political power. His 2020 is now in dustbin so also PURA (Provoiding Urban Facility in Rural Areas). I was lucky to have got him and his Chela Arun Tiwari to sign Agreement for Publishing his autobiography Wings of Fire. Has seen Dr Kalam in close quarters when we made Visually challenged Children to read few para from Braille edition of Wings of Fire. As a matter of fact our editorial team was in deliema on whether to accept or decline. I urged the team to accept and told them that it would be best seller which turned out to be correct it coincided when he got Bharat Ratna and went on to become President.

  5. Even the president of the most powerful country in the world Barack Obama sold “hope and change” to the US for 2 successive Presidential terms!
    And a poor (but growing although slower than required) country like India definitely needs a lot of hope and confidence that we can achieve something spectacular! The world lives on hope.
    This is exactly what our leftist-communist-socialist (liberals? really?) FAILED to do all these years. All they sold is poverty and not prosperity.
    Their system is so powerful that it still remains pretty strong. Eg: failing public sector enterprises such as BSNL, Air India. Failing banks which lend based on a phone call from the ministry. Corrupt APMCs, self-destructing labor unions. The list is long… Hopefully it’ll get shorter quickly.
    See my last sentence? It ends with hope!
    We need to quickly become a free-market economy and with that if we sustain 10%+ growth rate for at least a decade, everyone will see the change…

  6. As usual he will not miss an opportunity to “attack’Modiji.In the process he is talking of “Good”Muslims. Who are the “bad” Muslims according to him?

  7. Very good article. Selling hope is the best way to attract young people. Please continue to write such thought provoking article in future.

    • Looking at some of you who come defending Vij’s articles one is reminded of mediocre manipulative co-workers in the corporate sector who would play small games to stay visible in the organisation. Seems like you guys are instruments of such kind for Shivam Vij. You are doing well.

  8. !! Asatyam Shivam Sadaa Sandesham !!

    ThePrint….. warning signs!!
    One of your armchair journalist – Shivam We…zzzzzz is busy watching Youtube videos and their popularity.
    If this is the job profile of a journalist there, I am very much interested in joining. Dream Job!!

    Thanks in advance.

  9. .No Muslim in India Recognised Abdul Kalam as their Man. .As a Matter Fact Narendra Modi ha sno Necessity to get Shelter under Late Abdul Kalamji..Only the Economy of the Main Stream English media People and Leftists got effected. .They LOst their Incomes and Influence in Government .So Stomach and Hear Burn.. So Pressing their Own——- with their Maximum Strength.

  10. It would diminish President Kalam to think of him in terms of his religious identity, or the fact that he was a vegetarian and played the veena. His achievements were real,; he brought lustre and accessibility to Rashtrapati Bhavan. India should be a country filled with hope, both because it is young and because it is still largely poor. It is cruel to promise Indians anything other than a better material future, to work diligently to achieve that objective.

  11. You haven’t written Modi a single time in the article.

    I respect APJ Abdul Kalam sir, but please don’t put such stupid title to attract readers.

    Please show some professionalism. You are a media channel, not a BJP funded Modia.

    • You illiterate fool, did you even read the article? You just know to regurgitate “Modia” like fools as if you’ve achieved something. Stupid comment vomit.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Most Popular