Watch: BJP Min Wants Kids to Sing Vande Mataram, But Won’t Himself

An interesting turn in the debate to make singing Vande Mataram compulsory in schools.

Kabir Upmanyu
India
Updated:
BJP Minister Baldev Aulakh
i
BJP Minister Baldev Aulakh
(Photo Courtesy: Facebook/Baldev Aulakh BJP)

advertisement

The debate over compulsory singing of Vande Mataram in schools took a new turn during a TV show on India Today TV when a BJP UP minister, Baldev Singh Aulakh, was asked to sing the song himself.

Watch the video here:

Heated exchanges between anchor Rahul Kanwal and the minister of state for minority welfare ensued, and the latter ended up not singing the song.

The channel then went on to say that the minister "failed to sing even a single line of Vande Mataram" as he "was left red-faced".

The whole debate regarding the song assumed salience after the Madras High Court passed an order making it compulsory to sing it in schools and government offices last month.

This was followed by a resolution passed by the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) seeking to make it compulsory in civic schools coming under its jurisdiction. The move was welcomed by Raj Purohit, BJP's chief whip for the Maharashtra Assembly, who has been pushing for such a directive to be implemented across the country.

Interestingly, another India Today report said that even Purohit had difficulties when asked to sing Vande Mataram, as "he could not seem to remember the sequence of the lines of the song".

Watch this video of Purohit singing Vande Mataram:

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

At the same time, the BJP government in UP had issued a directive asking all madrassas to have Independence Day celebrations and to record them on video.

Aulakh was particularly active as far as this directive was concerned, as he said,

We have asked for videography of all programmes. We can check at random as to which madrassa has celebrated it or not. If any madrassa does not celebrate it, action will be taken against it.

(Love your mother tongue? This Independence Day, tell The Quint why and how you love your bhasha. You may even win a BOL t-shirt! Sing, write, perform, spew poetry – whatever you like – in your mother tongue. Send us your BOL at bol@thequint.com or WhatsApp it to 9910181818.)

(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)

Published: 12 Aug 2017,04:11 PM IST

ADVERTISEMENT
SCROLL FOR NEXT