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Given a chance, the man says he would place Ganesh idols in every mosque. He wants those opposing the Surya Namaskar to leave India or drown themselves in the ocean. And thinks Shah Rukh Khan sounds like Hafiz Saeed when the actor complains of growing intolerance in Indian society.
Yet Yogi Adityanath’s critics and supporters alike would agree that it is his firebrand version of Hindutva that has played a key role in getting him where he is today – poised to be the next Chief Minister of India’s most electorally significant state.
In a television interview in the run-up to the UP Assembly elections, Yogi Adityanath defended changing the names of places with Muslim names to those with Hindu names. Gorakhpur’s Miyan Bazaar was changed to Maya Bazaar, Ali Nagar to Arya Nagar, Urdu Bazaar to Hindi Bazaar, and so on.
It’s not just Adityanath’s stance on the nomenclature of places, however, that has given him an image of being ‘unfriendly’ towards minority communities. It’s what the five-time MP has said in the past. In September 2014, Adityanath had told a rally in Noida:
In the buildup to the polls, Adityanath positioned himself to the electorate as someone who would safeguard the communal ‘demographic balance’ of Uttar Pradesh.
Despite multiple reports finding little basis to the allegations of a forced Hindu exodus from Kairana, Adityanath had said in June last year:
Adityanath was speaking at the Vishwa Hindu Parishad’s ‘Virat Hindu Sammelan’ in Varanasi.
At a temple ceremony in Varanasi, the Lok Sabha constituency of PM Narendra Modi, Adityanath had declared that those opposing the surya namaskar, a salutation to the sun, should leave the country. Or better still, drown in the ocean.
Yogi Adityanath was not amused when Shah Rukh Khan entered the debate on rising intolerance in India. SRK had remarked that there was “nothing worse than religious intolerance and that it would take India to the Dark Ages.” He retaliated with what can only be called a warning to the actor.
Mother Teresa may have won a Nobel Peace Prize for her work for the poorest of the poor. But that wasn’t enough to win praise from Yogi Adityanath. In June last year, the BJP MP referred to Teresa as a member of an alleged conspiracy to ‘Christianise’ India.
On the same day, he was also reported as commenting on Ayodhya’s Ram Mandir issue, saying no one could prevent its construction.
Yogi Adityanath will be sworn in as the Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh on Sunday. With the general election barely two years away, how will the ascension of the firebrand leader affect the BJP’s fortunes? Moreover, what will its impact be on national politics? The answer to those questions, as to many others, lies in 2019.
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