"A Man for All Seasons" is an interesting play by Robert Bolt. It is based on the life of Thomas More. It deals with the importance of integrity, of staying true to one's conscience and ethical convictions, even at great personal cost.
Integrity is always a tough proposition. It becomes dicey still when you participate in public life, and hence your every move is constantly under microscopic scrutiny. Surviving that constant 'gaze', and yet retaining one's own integrity and humane qualities, not to forget sanity, is indeed a constant battle, and with the self! Those who win it are not mere politicians; they are the statesman type, extremely rare.
The submission of our blog today is that the man of the moment, Devendra Fadnavis, is on the path to such success in the public space. No, I do not have any personal contact with him. Nor am i a particularly political person in any sense of the term. Yet I would like to make this statement assertively.
Why? Let me see if I can clearly explain such a stance. For one thing, when he joined the centre stage of Maharashtra politics, he was young. Yet he was always mature in his responses. Still he was refreshingly frank, too. He openly stated how irritated his well-wishers were, as he agreed to take the "external support" of-n-by Mr. Pawar.
As in the case of the 2019 chief ministership of a day and a half, the 2014 'external support' possibly could not have been his own decision. Yet he got the worst flak which he faced with conviction and courage, just like the constant slurs against his caste, given the extreme and subtle caste prejudices in the contemporary Maharashtra politics.
He has been mocked viciously, and ad infinitum, for his "I shall come back..." quote. His own partymen saw to it that his maiden public meeting in Pune was a total fiasco. His mother, his wife have been targetted in an ugly way. Yet he continues to work hard, sincerely, and with a developmental vision.
Despite a huge win after horrible hard work ( he gave speeches in any number of back to back public meetings/rallies, appeared for countless interviews), this intelligent man requests his followers to avoid any rowdy excesses when it comes to the celebration mode.
In his acceptance speech after the current huge success, too, he did not covet the prize, ah, unlike our dear "amigo", El Señor Trump. Instead, he shared it with each and every one, the booth level party worker to the party top brass, not to forget the coalition partners.
As usual, despite being an "effective" n witty speaker, his reactions were sensible and balanced. Even his interviews, I watched a few, hardly had any invective, and were more a roadmap with a developmental vision. He surprisingly seemed to be quite aware of the latest developments in most all fields which sure would help in policy decisions and their execution which he could explain cogently.
He seems to have a connect with the common man, too. Why, during the COVID years, he was so much out in the field, trying to help the afflicted that he himself was twice hospitalised with the dis-ease.
No wonder, however much the critics may harp about the election process 'frauds' or the Shinde and Ajit Pawar factions breaking away (why, seasoned, wily politicians, "they" chose it, and could have rejected it, if it was in any way inconvenient to them, right?) from "their" parties, his image does not suffer a dent. He continues to appear honest, clean, dedicated to welfare, devoted to a developmental ideation!
A good son and a wonderful father, he has often clearly showed the gumption to openly admit that he accepts his wife's different decisions. Quite chivalrous, given the standard image of 'political' wives, right?
In brief, his journey from a nobody to a center stage personality today has wonderful lessons about communication, about convictions, about conducting oneself no(ta)bly in the public arena, for instance. Undoubtedly, he must have the unstinting support of the top brass in his own party. Yet no harm in admitting that it is tough to be a Fadnavis, and he sure deserves such kudos, right? Atta, Sir! You sure are a long distance runner, a marathon man in politics!
Pratima@Sure, his vicious critics would have all sorts of issues against him. I would not know such nitty-gritty. Yet he appears much better than most of his generation, especially if one remembers his decisions such as accepting Gadchiroli for his ministerial mentorship. The milestone state run bus service there for the first time since Independence is sure quite an achievement. No riots either given his Home Minister-ship, right? Good governance indeed!
Quote of the day: "A good leader," says John Maxwell, "knows the way, goes the way, and shows the way "
Word of the day: governance Governance is the overall complex system or framework of processes, functions, structures, rules, laws and norms.
Let us learn grammar: We have to use the definite article 'the' if there is an anaphoric (prior reference) and/or cataphoric reference (forward reference) in the discourse. Forget these technical terms from linguistics. Let me give you an example which would clarify the meaning. The girl in the blue frock is my friend. (prior reference defining 'the' friend). Before he entered the interview room, the candidate took a deep breath. ("he" explained later).