Nobody expects professional cricketers to be heroic outside the playing field. They have too much of a job coping with the demands and stresses of the game, including the ever-present risk of injury, to be asked to handle the challenges and complications of politics. Thirty-six-year-old Sachin Tendulkar, who is widely regarded as cricket’s greatest batsman after Don Bradman and has had to handle greater pressure than any other player under the sun, must be commended for making a stand against linguistic and ethnic chauvinism, and for the idea of India, in volatile Mumbai. The occasion was an interaction with the media to mark his 20 years in international cricket, and Tendulkar had this to say in response to a question: “Mumbai belongs to India, that’s how I look at it. And I am a Maharashtrian and I am extremely proud of that. But I am an Indian.” A motherhood-and-apple-pie kind of statement, you would think. But this is Mumbai, where Bal Thackeray’s Shiv Sena, and now its offshoot, nephew Raj Thackeray’s Maharashtra Navnirman Sena, have been menacing anyone dissenting from their brand of linguistic chauvinism. So in an open letter published in the Sena’s mouthpiece, Saamna, the ageing, cricket-loving founder of the Sena rebuked the cricket icon for taking “a cheeky single” and getting “run-out” on “the pitch of the Marathi psyche.” Anyone mistaking this for banter needs to be reminded of the vicious track record of the Sena and the MNS, of their anti-constitutional intolerance, of their toughs unleashing violence against all manner of targets.
At one level, the Sena supremo’s response spotlights his party’s undiminished linguistic parochialism, which manifests itself in assailing the very idea of India. But there is also a more calculating side to Mr. Thackeray’s broadside. Having performed poorly in the recent Maharashtra Assembly elections (so poorly, in fact, that he felt moved to criticise his Marathi manoos for betraying his party), he has been in search of opportunities to go on the offensive. The MNS’s cannibalisation of the Sena’s electoral base has only made matters worse. With Mr. Raj Thackeray’s political agenda modelled closely on the Shiv Sena’s anti-‘outsider’ campaign of the 1960s, the two regional parties are locked in chauvinist competition to stoke the economic and socio-cultural anxieties of the Marathi electorate, especially in Mumbai. The MNS recently stole the show for the most outrageous behaviour by physically attacking, in the Assembly chamber, a Samajwadi Party MLA for taking his oath in Hindi rather than Marathi. Sachin Tendulkar, by making his stand, unwittingly offered himself as a target in this battle for political space. The bright side of this affair is the manner in which public opinion everywhere has come out batting for India.
Keywords: Sachin Tendulkar, Bal Thackeray, Marathi, Mumbai, Shiv Sena, Saamna, Arun Jaitley, Ashok Chavan


Comments:
It is very unfortunate that even after 59 years of Union Republic formation, we still are fighting for regional and linguistic supremacy. This is the best time to bring the very main theme of True India that it is a Republic Union of India and the statement Unity in diversity is not only on paper but it should be in hearts of my fellow compatriots.
An eye opener. The Thackreys may learn anything like fundamental right of individuals in the great nation & also their political limits.
Well said! The Hindu can always be depended upon to raise its voice against the enemies of unity and prosperity for all Indians.
Thackeray and RSS are as dangerous as Lashkar, and have roughly the same aims -- to keep India burning. I am so thrilled to see Indians come out in favour of the country rather than fall for the linguistic trap.
These responses supporting the little master just did not come because of his tons of runs or dozens of centuries. Its all came for his demeanor and for a person who is one of the most committed to his nation, even in the times of match-fixing, every time he gets on to the field.
Of course, public never supports linguistic or ethnic chauvinism. Everyone outside Mumbai is not at all happy with the developments in 'political Mumbai'. Everyone's reply to this episode alerts all the political parties who are still assuming that violence and local chauvinism will get their quota in the vote-bank!
God!! Why People like Sachin are not preferring politics!!!
Everytime MNS or Shivsena shows their chauvinism the victims are either common people(ousiders) or public properties.But this time it is differently the "gentleman" of the most cherished game in india:Sachin.Everyone should appreciate for his concern over the nation being partitioned on unwanted cretiria.But how could they attack an Indian who calims himself to be an Indian.Even the great Maratha leaders like Savarkar,Tilak and Shivaji considered themselves to be Indians first.I sincerely wish that these chauvinists will not damage the marathi pride for their vested intersts.
If parties with a parochial worldview such as the Shiv Sena and the MNS came into being and are thriving, the Congress party in Maharashtra should bear the blame for it. Shiv Sena's origin can be traced back to the days when the Congress party in Mumbai (Bombay then)under the leadership of S.K.Patil wanted to defeat "outsider" V.K.Krishna Menon who was the Congress candidate from North Bombay for Lok Sabha election. Now to defeat the same Shiv Sena in the elections,Congress is reported to have given covert support to MNS. Earlier the Congress government had handled Raj Thakeray with kid gloves when he went after North Indian residents in Mumbai. Perhaps, as in love and war, every thing is fair in election politics!
Tendulkar scored a brilliant century with his remarks and remained unbeaten.