BJP’s Manifesto: A Cultural Embrace to Counter TMC’s ‘Anti-Bengali’ Narrative

BJP’s Manifesto: A Cultural Embrace to Counter TMC’s ‘Anti-Bengali’ Narrative.webp

Kolkata, April 10 In a significant shift in political messaging, the BJP on Friday presented its core Hindutva agenda in the language of Bengali pride, culture, and heritage, aiming to counter the TMC's long-standing charge that the saffron party is "anti-Bengali" and culturally alien to the state.

Promising a 'Vande Mataram Museum' and a Shaktipeeth circuit, and invoking Rabindranath Tagore, Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, and the iconic Thakur Panchanan Barma, the BJP's manifesto attempted a careful balancing act – retaining its core ideological appeal while appropriating the cultural grammar that has shaped Bengal's politics since 2021.

The document, unveiled by Union Home Minister Amit Shah, marked perhaps the clearest acknowledgement yet by the BJP that electoral success in Bengal cannot be achieved solely through Hindutva.

For a party that has traditionally focused on issues like infiltration, religious polarization, and nationalism, the manifesto's repeated emphasis on "Bengali glory," "Bengal's civilization," and "Bengali Hindu cultural identity" signaled a strategic course correction.

"To promote Bengal's culture, we will build a Vande Mataram Museum. Through this museum, Bengal's culture, which is already admired worldwide, will gain fresh recognition and revival," Shah said while unveiling the manifesto.

The BJP also promised a law to ensure "freedom of religious faith and worship," stating that every individual would have the right to freely practice religion without restrictions.

The manifesto promised to develop a Chaitanya Mahaprabhu spiritual circuit, create Tagore-inspired cultural centres, establish a modern theatre institute, and increase the annual grant for theatre groups to Rs 1 lakh.

It pledged to strengthen the legacy of Rabindranath Tagore through scholarships for young artists, cultural institutions named after him, and initiatives to preserve and promote his work nationally and globally.

The party also sought to tap into regional aspirations, promising to bring the Kurmali and Rajbongshi languages under the Eighth Schedule of the Constitution and honor regional icons such as Thakur Panchanan Barma.

Under a proposed "One District One Product" initiative, the BJP promised to promote district-specific cultural and economic identities – Murshidabad silk, Nadia taant (handloom), Uttar Dinajpur's shola craft, and other local products – on national and global platforms.

It also promised to showcase Bengal's folk traditions internationally and transform Gangasagar Mela, Mahesher Rath Yatra, Baruni Mela, and Bandna festival into international spiritual and cultural events in collaboration with the Centre, while pursuing UNESCO intangible cultural heritage status for them.

The manifesto further proposed a Shaktipeeth circuit linking major centres of worship across Bengal, blending pilgrimage politics with the larger project of cultural assertion.

Rejecting "rumours" by TMC, Shah asserted that a BJP government would not interfere with Bengal's food culture, including the consumption of fish, a regular Bengali diet.

The political subtext of these promises was clear.

Since the BJP's dramatic rise in Bengal in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, when it won 18 of the state's 42 seats with around 41 per cent of the vote, the TMC has sought to counter the saffron party not only politically but culturally.

In the 2021 assembly polls, Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee successfully recast the contest as one between Bengalis and "outsiders".

Her slogan "Bangla Nijer Meyekei Chai" (We want Bengal ourselves) and the broader campaign projecting the BJP as a party of Hindi-speaking outsiders helped the TMC consolidate Bengali sub-nationalism and turn the election into an emotional contest over identity.

The result was decisive. The TMC won 213 seats in the 294-member assembly in the 2021 elections, while the BJP, despite its aggressive campaign and repeated visits by central leaders, remained stuck at 77.

Since then, the BJP has struggled to shake off the "anti-Bengali" label that the TMC has relentlessly attached to it.

The manifesto appears to be an attempt to correct that. By embracing Tagore, Bengali folk traditions, district-specific crafts, and local linguistic aspirations, the BJP is seeking to recast itself not as an external force seeking to reshape Bengal, but as a party rooted in Bengal's own cultural and civilisational traditions.

This effort reflects a larger ideological shift within the BJP's Bengal unit – from presenting Hindutva in a pan-Indian, homogenized form to articulating what party leaders increasingly describe as a specifically "Bengali Hindu cultural" identity.

This identity seeks to combine religious symbolism with the Bengali language, literature, and cultural pride. Thus, alongside cries of "Jai Shri Ram," BJP platforms in Bengal increasingly invoke "Jai Ma Kali," "Jai Ma Durga," and Tagore.

Shah linked the BJP's vision to the period between Poila Baisakh (Bengali New Year's day) on April 15 and Tagore's birth anniversary on May 9, five days after poll results are announced, projecting it as the beginning of a wider effort to restore Bengal's "lost glory".

Political observers say the BJP has realised that to challenge the TMC effectively in Bengal, it must fight not only on the terrain of religion and governance but also on the far more emotionally resonant terrain of culture and identity.

Polling for the 294-member West Bengal Assembly will be held in two phases on April 23 and April 29.
 
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bengali culture bengali language bjp chaitanya mahaprabhu cultural heritage district-specific products election campaign hindutva political messaging religious freedom shaktipeeth circuit tagore thakur panchanan barma tmc vande mataram museum west bengal politics
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