http://www.hindustantimes.com/News-Feed/RajdeepSardesai/Not-just-idle-worship/Article1-759697.aspx
 
 Not just idle worship
 Rajdeep Sardesai, Hindustan Times
 October 21, 2011
 
 At a time when Mayawati's Dalit memorials have sparked off a raging
 debate, it might be instructive to consider what the original Dalit
 icon Babasaheb Ambedkar would have done in a similar situation. What
 is almost certain is that, unlike the Uttar Pradesh chief  minister,
 he would not have
 ordered the construction of  his own statues. A fierce rationalist,
 Ambedkar disliked all forms of political idol worship. "In politics,
 hero worship is a sure road to degradation and eventual dictatorship,"
 he said in a seminal speech before the Constituent Assembly in 1949.
 
 Sixty-two years later, there is little doubt that Mayawati has emerged
 as the great dictator of Uttar Pradesh, someone who controls India's
 most populous state with an iron fist. Which is why she can insist on
 having her own life-size statue alongside an Ambedkar, Phule, Shahu
 and Kanshi Ram. Which is also why she can brazenly claim that the Rs
 675 crore spent on the Dalit Prerna Sthal has come through party
 donations when the fact is the UP government has budgeted a whopping
 Rs 3,000 crore on Dalit memorials and parks across the state.  This,
 in a state where 38% Dalits have never attended schools, where 70% is
 still the estimated school dropout rate among Dalits, and where
 hundreds of  children die of encephalitis every year because of a lack
 of  healthcare facilities.
 
 Surely, Ambedkar, for whom education was the biggest weapon of
 empowerment, would have chided Mayawati for her misplaced priorities.
 He would have been equally critical of the personal wealth which the
 CM seems to have acquired through questionable means, and might have
 winced at reading that Mayawati spent Rs 51 crore of public money in
 renovating her official bungalow, apart from acquiring prime
 properties across the national capital.
 
 Not that Ambedkar lived a frugal lifestyle. His wealth was acquired
 through legal and scholastic prowess, not through treating the
 political system as a vehicle for self-aggrandisement. As his
 biographer Dhananjay Keer writes, "Ambedkar's house was not a detached
 villa that gave you the appearance of seclusion. His vast library, his
 rich clothes, his enormous pens, his grand car, the numerous varieties
 of shoes and the rare collection of pictures were the living marks of
 his conquering personality." Mayawati is unlikely to share Ambedkar's
 love for books, but if handbags are her fashion accessory, then so was
 the fountain pen in the case of Babasaheb. If for Gandhi the loin
 cloth symbolised his asceticism, the three-piece suit was Ambedkar's
 style statement to tell the world that his origins were no hindrance
 to rising up the social ladder.
 
 To those who are critical of the manner in which Mayawati celebrates
 her birthdays, it needs to be stressed that Ambedkar's birthdays too
 were occasions for public celebration with his followers taking out
 processions with his pictures in palanquins. In a sense, the need for
 such public ceremonies stems from a conviction that it is necessary to
 show that if caste Hindus can have their own gods and ceremonies, then
 so must Dalits. Ambedkar may not have been comfortable with idolatry,
 but he did not entirely reject its symbolic value either on such
 occasions.
 
 Which is why the personality cult that Mayawati has built around
 herself cannot be entirely scoffed at. The Indian super-elite - many
 of whom will not think twice before spending crores on weddings - may
 be contemptuous of Mayawati's millions, but there is a distinct method
 in the seeming madness of the Bahujan Samaj Party leader. If the
 fortress around Sonia Gandhi's personal life heightens her mystique,
 then the imperious style of functioning of Mayawati gives her an
 empress-like status among her followers. If there are dozens of
 memorials in the name of the Congress's first family and freedom
 heroes, then Mayawati appears equally determined to create her own
 pantheon of Dalit legends. And if the Sangh parivar can aspire to
 build a Ram mandir in Ayodhya as a symbol of  religio-political
 identity, then Mayawati, too, sees her Ambedkar parks as an assertion
 of  Dalit identity.
 
 Seen from that competitive political perspective, it is possible that
 Ambedkar may even have grudgingly approved of Mayawati's grand
 projects. Ambedkar's great dream always was to acquire political
 dominance for the Dalits even while seeking an end to caste
 discrimination. But the keys to the gates of power remained firmly
 locked during his lifetime. The Independent Labour Party that he
 formed had only limited success and he lost the first general election
 in 1952 as an independent. That he became the country's first law
 minister was only due to the vision and generosity of Mohandas Gandhi,
 but his political fortunes never matched his intellect. Indeed, it was
 his frustration with an upper caste dominated socio-political system
 that eventually led him to embrace Buddhism.
 
 Contrast that with Mayawati who has clearly shown that it is possible
 for a Dalit woman to make it to one of the most powerful political
 positions in the country entirely on her own terms. If Ambedkar was
 the ultimate constitutionalist, Mayawati, guided in her early years by
 the equally redoubtable Kanshi Ram, has been the consummate
 politician, breaking and striking alliances with ease. The ethical
 standards employed in achieving power may be deeply troubling, but in
 the political akhara of UP, norms and rules have been routinely bent
 by the principal players. Which is why Mayawati's achievement of being
 the daughter of a post office clerical employee who rose to becoming a
 four-time chief minister of the state is quite remarkable. A Mayawati
 statue next to the architect of  the Constitution  may seem
 incongruous today. But many years later, it may well become a place of
 pilgrimage and inspiration for millions of Dalits.
 
 Rajdeep Sardesai is Editor-in-Chief, IBN 18. The views expressed by
 the author are personal.
 
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