"It is probably because nobody in the present government has read or written any books. In Vajpayee government, at least half of the cabinet had written and read various books," said the prominent historian, who was speaking on the second day of TimesLitfest organised at Bandra.
He pointed out, "Prime Minister Vajpayee himself was a poet, leaders like Murli Manohar Joshi, Jaswant Singh and Yashwant Sinha had written books. Other members of the then cabinet like Mamata Banerjee had read Rabindranath Tagore. I don't think anyone in the current government read books and hence is the contempt for scholars."
Guha was in conversation with former armyman turned historian Srinath Raghavan under the programme titled 'As History as it happened, and history in hindsight.'
"There is a need for new historians to come and write
about our history, because earlier there was hegemony of Congress on history writing in the country. Historians wrote about people which would be suitable to Congress culture," said Guha.
"Today, change in power at the Centre has given opportunity to write about history with new perspective. But the new people have little to do with research and worse thing is that they are abusive," he said.
Asked why some leaders from the past are again brought to forefront in the current context, Guha said, earlier Ambedkar was scorned and today he is blindly adopted. He was not only involved in Constitution and Dalit rights, but he was a scholar, he was also a sensitive person and these aspects should be brought in to his biography.
Similar is the case of V D Savarkar, who was a social reformer and not just the mentor of (Nathuram) Godse. Hence, young historians should write and bring these aspects into the picture as well, he said.
