ADVERTISEMENT

The real quake

By Member of Parliament Viplove Thakur

Viplove Thakur speaks at the UN in 2018 (File photo)

Anita Joshua
Published 07.02.20, 09:31 PM

When fire and brimstone rain down, little captures the force of nature better than the home-grown admonition: “Baitho, chup kar ke baitho (Sit down, just shut up and sit down.”)

On Thursday, attention was focused on the Prime Minister’s fixation on Jawaharlal Nehru and an “earthquake” remark Narendra Modi had made against former Jammu and Kashmir chief minister Omar Abdullah in the Lok Sabha. Since then fears have been expressed that the Prime Minister might have sourced the “earthquake” reference from a satirical portal named Faking News.

ADVERTISEMENT

However, soon after the Prime Minister replied to the motion of thanks to the President’s address in the Lok Sabha, an undeniable “earthquake” rocked the Rajya Sabha.

Viplove Thakur, a septuagenarian MP, stood up and gave off fire and flair that many of India’s youth, currently agitating on the streets, would be envious of. Like the grannies of Shaheen Bagh, the 76-year-old Congress MP from Himachal Pradesh brought to the august House a whiff of what this nation’s elders should be doing in aid of preserving enshrined constitutional values.

Ever the doughty fighter, Thakur held her ground and asked her challengers to shut up and sit down when she was heckled from the word go, beginning as she did by wondering what was there to thank in the President’s address filled with the litany of “repainted” schemes of the Modi government.

On Friday, Thakur told The Telegraph over phone that some BJP members told her after her 10-minute speech that “aapne bahut dara diya tha (you gave us a big scare)”.

“I spoke from my heart as it pains me to see the way the social fabric of the country is being torn asunder,” she added.

Thakur is a familiar figure in Parliament and known for fiery speeches. For the benefit of readers elsewhere, this newspaper asked her about the story behind her name, “Viplove”.

She was named after revolution (“viplav” in Hindi, “biplab” in Bengali) by her parents. Thakur’s mother Sarla Sharma was jailed for participating in the Quit India movement in 1942. Her father — known as Comrade Paras Ram — was a member of the undivided Communist Party.

Prime Minister Modi, who rarely misses a chance to take pot shots at Nehru, is well-advised not to cross her path with uncharitable thoughts about the first Prime Minister although she made no reference to Modi in this context.

“I am enraged every time Jawaharlal Nehru is maligned by the BJP leadership,” Thakur said.

Thakur had met Nehru in 1957 when she was 13. Nehru had come to inaugurate the Punjab Assembly, where her mother had been elected on a Congress ticket.

Sarla Sharma, her mother, took Thakur and her sister to a dinner hosted for Nehru by the governor. The then chief minister of Punjab, Partap Singh Kairon, had introduced them to Nehru.

“Panditji spent more time with my sister and me than he did with anyone else that evening. He was very affectionate towards children,” Thakur recalled.

She remembers another anecdote from the dinner. At one point, women legislators were scrambling for a photograph with Nehru and he told them to form a line.

“But when they were still jostling, Panditji told them: ‘Ek line nahi bana sakte, tum kya legislator banoge (You can’t organise a line, how would you become legislators?)’ He turned to us and said: ‘Chalo bachchon. Hamare saath chalo (Come on kids. Come with me),’” Thakur recounted.

A post graduate in political science from Panjab University, Thakur is interested in trekking and mountaineering, skiing, debating, reading and writing. According to PRS Legislative Research, Thakur has clocked 92 per cent attendance in the House, way above the national average of 79 per cent. Not only does she attend the sittings, she also participates in debates and asks questions, again scoring better than the national average on both counts.

“I never read from a prepared text. I prefer extempore. The ruling dispensation ensures there is no dearth of issues,” Thakur, a former MLA and minister in the Himachal Pradesh government, told this newspaper.

She repeated several times: “Yeh log desh ko baant rahe hain (These people are dividing the country).”

Viplove whiplash

Excerpts from MP Viplove Thakur’s speech in the Rajya Sabha on Thursday

Narendra Modi Omar Abdullah Viplove Thakur Jawaharlal Nehru Faking News
Follow us on:
ADVERTISEMENT