Tea boy slur brews a backlash for India's ruling party

AFP
February 14, 2014 11:52 MYT
India's tea makers are an industrious bunch whose road-side stalls are places of clanking kitchenware, gossip, and scalding hot brews.
Many vendors like Jaiveer Jasiwal, whose grimy family-run stand can be found in the old part of Delhi, dream of bigger things. But few ever thought one of their own might one day rise to be prime minister.
That prospect, in a country still riven by caste and ruled for most of its post-independence history by a single dynasty, looks increasingly likely with the rise of opposition leader Narendra Modi.
And thanks to an ill-advised political barb from a ruling party MP who mocked Modi's time as a "chai wallah" (tea boy), tea stands have been thrust centre stage in a bitter campaign for the national elections due by May.
On Wednesday night, Modi began "Chai pe Charcha" (Discussion over Tea), which saw him slurp a glass in his home state and take questions about governance.
The event was broadcast to tea stands and their working class clients across the country in 300 cities, including Jasiwal's, a stone's throw from the city's landmark Red Fort.
"He (Modi) represents people like us who have small means, but big dreams," said Jasiwal, 28, who also runs what he describes as a one-man business consultancy firm on the side.
"And if he can do it and I can sort of do it, then anyone can do anything. PM, doctor, teacher, actor, anything," he said.
Modi, a hardline Hindu nationalist whose links to religious riots in 2002 make him a divisive figure, is pitching a message of jobs, development, aspiration and social mobility.
One of his perceived assets is his background as a lower caste former tea boy from western Gujarat who rose through the ranks of grassroots Hindu organisations to become PM candidate for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
In his public addresses, often delivered in coarse Hindi and dripping with sarcasm, Modi routinely derides his main opponent, Rahul Gandhi, as a "shahzada" or prince.
Anti-elite backlash
Gandhi, a Harvard-educated son, grandson and great-grandson of Indian prime ministers, still appears to struggle with his famous name and new role leading the ruling Congress party into elections.
Faced with a backlash against the English-speaking political establishment, epitomised by the surge of the new Aam Aadmi (Common Man) Party, the recent mockery of Modi's background appears to have spectacularly backfired.
Speaking at a meeting of the Congress party in January, upper house MP Mani Shankar Aiyar told reporters of Modi: "There is no way he can be prime minister in the 21st century... But if he wants to come and serve tea here we can make some room for him."
Gandhi reportedly later condemned the remark in private -- although he praised Aiyar publicly at the meeting -- and commentators quickly seized on a slur seen as both casteist and patronising.
It was also at odds with the mood of the country at a time of immense economic change that has seen aspirations rise and the shackles of the ancient caste system loosen further.
"That remark can be very damaging," said Christophe Jaffrelot, from Sciences Po university in Paris, one of the leading international experts on India.
"I do think now that times have changed and you can't claim that the lineage is an asset. It's a liability," he told AFP.
Changing expectations
If true, in a country where business and politics have long been dominated by a handful of well-connected families, this would represent a radical change.
"See their mentality," Modi said recently at a campaign stop in northern Uttar Pradesh, referring to Congress, which has been in power nationally since 2004.
"They do not like if a chai wallah, a son of a poor mother walks with his head held high," he added. "The Congress has insulted the poor, mocked my origins as a tea seller."
Jaffrelot says only once has India had a prime minister whose background is comparable with Modi's: H.D Deve Gowda, whose agricultural heritage and rustic Hindi set him apart from colleagues during his brief 1996-97 rule.
And in a country where up to 90 percent of the working population have jobs in the informal sector -- like tea stalls -- Modi can sell his personal story to a formidable constituency.
"The problem with most politicians, be it Congress or BJP or whoever, is their arrogance," said tea seller Rameez, 33, who works in the Delhi suburb of Noida.
As rickshaw drivers and factory workers waited for a drink he added: "They feel only the rich and educated become prime ministers. At least Modi knows how to make tea, has Aiyar ever made anything himself? Doubtful."
Rameez plans to open a restaurant.
"I don't think I'll become prime minister or the president," he said. "But I definitely know that I can do something big."
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