The dramatic I-won't-take-it-lying-down resignation and the later meek surrender to Hindu hardliners marks the end of an era for the L.K. Advani we have known for two decades.
If Advani loyalists think the man or the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) that he heads has emerged stronger after the unsavoury row involving Pakistan's "father" Mohammed Ali Jinnah, they are horribly wrong.
Even when he left for Pakistan early in June, Advani looked every inch a confident man, a politician who some day would get to rule this country a la his long-time friend and self-confessed moderate Atal Bihari Vajpayee.
But Advani is no Vajpayee, and this episode has proved he can never be one.
When Vajpayee, the man who has earned remarkable acceptability from BJP's numerous allies despite never hiding his commitment to the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS), visited Jinnah's memorial in Islamabad, there was no outcry.
After all, it has become customary for leaders visiting Pakistan to pay their obeisance to Jinnah, one who is widely blamed in India for the 1947 partition of the sub-continent that triggered so much human misery.
People visiting the Mao mausoleum in Beijing are not expected to adhere to Maoism. You can visit the Jinnah tombstone, place a wreath and come away without offending anyone's sensibilities.
It is as much a formality, as much a military dictator bowing to Mahatma Gandhi's memorial at the Rajghat here.
Advani, himself a victim of the 1947 India split, should have known better.
The original support base of the RSS-sponsored Jana Sangh, the BJP's predecessor, lay in northern India, mostly among the Hindu trading class and the Punjabi middle class that was uprooted from Pakistan.
They never forgave Jinnah for what his ideology did to them, and one can't fault them for that.
Those born after 1947 were taught in schools that but for the uncompromising Jinnah the India one knew until Aug 15, 1947, a physical entity that stretched from the Afghan border all the way up to Myanmar, would have remained in tact.
Suddenly, whatever the provocation and whatever his motive, Advani uttered words that seemed to turn history upside down. It is doubtful if Advani visualised that he was triggering a volcanic burst.
As India and Pakistan make peace and see the human side of one another after five decades of hostility, some things won't change - at least that easily. The popular Indian assessment of Jinnah is one such thing.
Right from 1986 when Advani became the BJP president replacing a Vajpayee, the man from Karachi has been making waves. Even when he gave the prime ministerial baton to Vajpayee in 1996, he was still the livewire.
The situation was no different even after BJP was shocked and stunned by the 2004 electoral verdict. In these two decades, Advani came to be known as the aggressive Hindutva champion, a man who would have saved India had he been around when Jinnah was in the thick of it all.
And so, when Advani said what he said in Karachi, there was no way the constituency he had nurtured and which helped him become what he has become was going to forgive him.
The face-saving BJP resolution issued Friday is a resounding slap for the Advani who was seemingly trying to change ideological tracks.
It is a lesson for those, in India and Pakistan, who want to try unexplored territory - "out of the box", as Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf would say - in their quest for peace.
(Narayan Swamy, the chief news editor of IANS, can be reached at narayan.swamy@eians.com)
Harvard students condemn Oxford University
Publish Date : 3/5/2007 7:11:00 AM
Two Harvard students, including an NRI, have condemned Oxford University, where they are Rhodes scholars, as "outdated" and "frustrating" and dismissed its world famous Bodleian library as "less than inspiring".
Indian embassy to outsource jobs to American firm
Publish Date : 3/5/2007 7:10:00 AM
After taking thousands of American jobs through outsourcing, India is planning to give a few back. The Indian embassy in the US capital is planning to outsource processing of visas to a US-based company.
Badal heads 18-member coalition ministry in Punjab(Final lead: Badal)
Publish Date : 3/3/2007 7:29:00 AM
Octogenarian leader of the Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) Parkash Singh Badal, on Friday took oath as Punjab's new Chief Minister and will lead an 18-member SAD-Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) coalition ministry.
Bareilly eunuch adopts a girl child
Publish Date : 3/3/2007 7:22:00 AM
It was a day of celebration for Saroj, a eunuch in Bareilly in Uttar Pradesh, as 'she' has become a 'mother' by adopting a baby girl.
Kalam offers prayer at Fatehpuri Masjid
Publish Date : 3/3/2007 7:16:00 AM
Keeping a promise made two years ago, President A P J Abdul Kalam today offered prayers at the historic Fatehpuri Masjid in Chandni Chowk here along with thousands of Muslims.
Union Budget directionless, says Modi
Publish Date : 3/1/2007 8:41:00 AM
Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi today criticised the Union Budget by terming it as "directionless".
Centre allocates over Rs 100 crore for minority zones
Publish Date : 3/1/2007 8:38:00 AM
Unfazed by the BJP's criticism over its welfare schemes for Muslims, the Congress-led Central Government has allocated over Rs 100 crore for development programmes in select districts with a sizeable population of minorities.
Kins of political bigwigs fail to find voters' favour
Publish Date : 3/1/2007 8:27:00 AM
The assembly polls in Punjab turned out to be unkind for several kins of political bigwigs as voters rejected most of them barring some of Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) supremo Parkash Singh Badal's near and dear ones.
High Court order on age of nursery admission tomorrow
Publish Date : 3/1/2007 8:24:00 AM
The Delhi High Court today observed that the city Government's submission that a child should be four-years-old to get admission in nursery class was contrary to the law.
Parliament session may be stormy tomorrow on Quattrocchi issue
Publish Date : 3/1/2007 8:18:00 AM
After the lull, it is going to be storm again in Parliament tomorrow.
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