This story is from September 26, 2019
In West Nagpur, calls grow to pick Hindi speaking candidates
Nagpur: The clamour and intense lobbying for the last two months in the city for a Hindi-speaking candidate (non-Marathi) manifested itself on Wednesday with flex hoardings put up all over
This demand for giving representation to a Hindi-Bhashi cannot be easily brushed aside because of the sizeable number of voters from non-Hindi speaking population who have settled in the city for generations. They comprise those who migrated here for employment in large number of Central government offices located in the city as well a larger community of traders and businessmen who have made Nagpur their home.
The situation changed after Nagpur along with the 10 districts of Vidarbha were merged into Marathi speaking state of Maharashtra. The state was formed in 1960 ignoring the demand for a Vidarbha state that was almost considered by the Fazal Ali Commission.
It is argued that the merger was done for the political convenience of Congress which did not want to lose control of financial hub of the then Bombay.
Major parties like Congress and Jansangh always considered this non-Marathi population factor. Jansangh for years fielded Ramprakash Ahuja for Lok Sabha though he never won. A Parsi,
More prominently,
Banwarilal Purohit, a Marwadi, was MLA from West Nagpur on Congress ticket before he became MP and later got elected to Lok Sabha as BJP nominee.
So, practically, all major political parties always saw electoral merits in Hindi speaking candidates.
Since July, cutting across party affiliations, several meetings of Hindi Bhashi Sangh were organized in the city to mount pressure for candidature of a non-Marathi from West Nagpur seat. Chaturvedi is not interested any more in contesting though his suspension has been revoked by the Congress party recently.
Those keen for the ticket are Krishna Kumar Pande, a very senior Congress worker and national adviser of Seva Dal, and Dayashankar Tiwari of the BJP. Both have applied to their respective parties for candidature from Nagpur West. Jaiprakash Gupta who shifted to the BJP from Congress years ago, is keen on ticket from Nagpur central.
The posters seeking ticket for Hindi Bhashi do not mention any name and interestingly have colours of both the Congress and BJP flags. But within the Congress, there is simmering anger among Hindi speaking workers that the party is obsessed with Kunbis. The resentment has been seen in social media posts. More so because in recent Lok Sabha elections all Congress candidates were Kunbis. “If only one community gets representations, why would other linguistic groups even work or vote for the Congress?” said a local leader warning of serious repercussions in coming election if the demand of Hindi Bhashis is ignored.
ELECTED LEADERS
Prominent Hindi speaking leaders who got elected from Nagpur for Lok Sabha or Vidhan Sabha:
Gev Awari (Parsi), Banwarilal Purohit (Marwadi), Satish Chaturvedi (migrant from UP), Avinash Pande
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West Nagpur
. With just a day left for the start of filing nominations for the October 21 state elections, this language divide could cause a new problem for the political parties.The situation changed after Nagpur along with the 10 districts of Vidarbha were merged into Marathi speaking state of Maharashtra. The state was formed in 1960 ignoring the demand for a Vidarbha state that was almost considered by the Fazal Ali Commission.
It is argued that the merger was done for the political convenience of Congress which did not want to lose control of financial hub of the then Bombay.
Major parties like Congress and Jansangh always considered this non-Marathi population factor. Jansangh for years fielded Ramprakash Ahuja for Lok Sabha though he never won. A Parsi,
Gev Awari
, won the Lok Sabha elections from city in 1977 defeatingJambuwant Dhote
, the tallest pro-Vidarbha leader. Dhote was Marathi while Parsi community was minuscule. Awari also has credit of defeating Nitin Gadkari in Vidhan Sabha elections of 1985.More prominently,
Satish Chaturvedi
, a Hindi-speaking Congress leader represented East Nagpur for three decades and held several ministerial posts. In 1985, when he was denied ticket by the Congress, another Hindi Bhashi Avinash Pande was victorious from that seat defeating Chaturvedi who contested as a rebel independent.Banwarilal Purohit, a Marwadi, was MLA from West Nagpur on Congress ticket before he became MP and later got elected to Lok Sabha as BJP nominee.
Since July, cutting across party affiliations, several meetings of Hindi Bhashi Sangh were organized in the city to mount pressure for candidature of a non-Marathi from West Nagpur seat. Chaturvedi is not interested any more in contesting though his suspension has been revoked by the Congress party recently.
Those keen for the ticket are Krishna Kumar Pande, a very senior Congress worker and national adviser of Seva Dal, and Dayashankar Tiwari of the BJP. Both have applied to their respective parties for candidature from Nagpur West. Jaiprakash Gupta who shifted to the BJP from Congress years ago, is keen on ticket from Nagpur central.
The posters seeking ticket for Hindi Bhashi do not mention any name and interestingly have colours of both the Congress and BJP flags. But within the Congress, there is simmering anger among Hindi speaking workers that the party is obsessed with Kunbis. The resentment has been seen in social media posts. More so because in recent Lok Sabha elections all Congress candidates were Kunbis. “If only one community gets representations, why would other linguistic groups even work or vote for the Congress?” said a local leader warning of serious repercussions in coming election if the demand of Hindi Bhashis is ignored.
ELECTED LEADERS
Prominent Hindi speaking leaders who got elected from Nagpur for Lok Sabha or Vidhan Sabha:
Gev Awari (Parsi), Banwarilal Purohit (Marwadi), Satish Chaturvedi (migrant from UP), Avinash Pande
Stay updated with the latest news on Times of India. Don't miss daily games like Crossword, Sudoku, and Mini Crossword.
Top Comment
ginger toast
1480 days ago
A lot of flaws in the writing. It is insinuating that Vidarbha wasn't a Marathi region and later Marathi people just came and settled in Nagpur. Just because Hindi speakers are settled in Nagpur which is just one city in the Vidarbha region doesn't mean the entire region of Vidarbha wasn't Marathi speaking region. Nagpur is not Vidarbha and Vidarbha is not Nagpur. Don't attribute the situation in Nagpur to all of the Vidarbha regions. The Vidarbha is a Marathi region and it's a part of Maharashtra. And Hindi speakers are just migrants and settlers here who came from different states from different corners of "India". So exactly how this article is trying to claim that Hindi speakers (migrants from different corners of "India") have more claim on Nagpur or Vidarbha than Marathi people? How this article is trying to portray that Hindi speakers are somehow "natives" and Marathi people are just settlers?Read allPost comment
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