In October 2017, Modi launched a tirade against his critics, who had blamed the government for the current economic slowdown and questioned his policies on demonetisation and the implementation of the goods and services tax (GST). He had said: “There are many Shalyas today… they spread pessimism and get a good night’s sleep only after they spread gloom and hopelessness.”
Shalya is a character from the Mahabharata. He was the ruler of the Madra kingdom and the brother of Madri, one of the wives of King Pandu. The twist in the story is that Shalya was expected to fight for the Pandavas against the Kauravas in the Kurukshetra battle. But on being wooed by the Kauravas, led by Duryodhana, he decided to be with them and became the charioteer of Karna, another warrior who should have been part of the Pandava army but ironically ended up fighting against them.
Shalya’s death is equally significant. On the 18th day of the Kurukshetra battle, Shalya was nominated to head the Kaurava army and fought valiantly, only to be defeated and later killed by Yudhishthira. Shalya had another tussle with the Pandavas much before the Kurukshetra battle. Just before Arjuna won the contest to qualify as the groom for Draupadi, Shalya had presented himself as an aspirant. But he failed to hit the target and lost Draupadi. Peeved by this defeat, Shalya had joined hands with other kings and fought Arjuna, but he was defeated in that battle, with Bhima coming to Arjuna’s rescue.
When Modi referred to Shalya, he was trying to describe his critics, many of whom had emerged from within the BJP. So, was Modi referring to Arun Shourie or Yashwant Sinha, who indeed had criticised the Modi government’s policies? Sinha is officially part of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and a member of the near-defunct Margdarshak Mandal, a team that Modi had set up in 2014 as a group of elder statesmen of the party to provide guidance and advice to the younger leadership. But setting up of the Margdarshak Mandal looked to be a clever way of bypassing these senior leaders. So, for all practical purposes, Sinha, though within the party, is an outsider.
Similarly, Shourie is reported to have left the BJP and has been vocal in his criticism of the Modi government. But unlike Shalya, Shourie has not joined any other party. It would thus appear that Shourie could partly be Shalya, but not Sinha, who attacked the party from within.
But the question is: Who are the Kauravas and who are the Pandavas?
Indradhanush