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My son loves everyone:
Modi's mother
December 07, 2002, rediff.com
Vadnagar: "My son is
not against anybody. For him Desh Prem [love of the
nation] is more important than anything else in life,"
says Hiraben, mother of the caretaker Chief Minister of
Gujarat, Narendra Modi.
When you tell her that
Muslims dislike her son, she says, "Ask the Muslims of
Vadnagar. They will never say anything against my son. He
is not against Muslims. He always used to tell me that if
there is one person who is ready to die for the country,
it is him."
On entering Vadnagar in
Mehsana district, there is a huge poster of Modi next to
those of the burning Sabarmati Express and Akshardham
temple. Everyone here knows where Hiraben lives. The roads
are narrow, but made of concrete. Cows and buffaloes greet
you on the road to Modi's house near Modi gully.
One has to walk down the
gully, as cars cannot enter. The resident are proud of the
fact that a boy, who once used to run around in front of
them, has become the chief minister and is the most
popular leader in the state.
However, Modi is one of
those rare politicians who has not done anything for his
family and the locality where he grew up.
He has visited his family
only five times ever since he left home in his teens to
join the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh. He never attended
marriages and other social functions in his family, but
came when his father died. And apart from a telephone call
every Diwali, Modi does not have any contact with his
mother.
Hiraben's husband,
Damodarbhai, was a small-time businessman and they had
five sons and one daughter -- Soma, Narendra, Amrith,
Prahlad, Pankaj and Vasanti [daughter].
Hiraben lives with the youngest son, Pankaj, who works in
the information department of the state government in
Gandhinagar.
In spite of the fact that
his brother is the chief minister, Pankaj takes a local
bus to office. On an average he spends four hours
travelling everyday, as the family does not even own a
scooter.
Hiraben says she doesn't
resent the fact that her son never helps her financially.
"My son is a man of principle. He will only help if people
at large are benefited. Our whole family believes in
simple living. In fact, we always taught Narendra to live
honesty. So why should I feel bad if he does not help us
financially," she says.
Hiraben is in her late
eighties and cannot walk without the help a cane. She
wears thick spectacles and dresses up in a simple white
sari. Though her elder sons are settled in Ahmedabad, she
says she will not move away from Vadnagar. "I love my
motherland very much and I cannot move to Ahmedabad
because I don't like that place so much."
Reminiscing, Hiraben says,
"Once he [Modi] found a one-rupee coin on the road... I
told him to spend it on himself. But instead he gave that
coin to a poor man's daughter in our village, who needed
money to buy books and pencils.
"I remember once he got home
a baby crocodile, which was in bad condition. He wanted to
nurse it, but we asked him to release it in the river. He
agreed, but reluctantly. I know he loves everyone."
Hiraben says her son does
all his work, including washing and ironing his clothes.
"And yes, no matter what the temperature is, he always
takes bath in cold water," she adds.
Ask her which party she will
vote for, Hiraben says, "Of course BJP! I always used to
vote for the Jan Sangh [the BJP's parent party]. If you
have parents then you cannot change them. In the same
ways, if you have one party you must vote for that party
only."
Like all mothers, Hiraben
misses her son very much. "After all I am his mother. But
luckily, now I see him on television everyday and give him
blessings. I feel very proud of him."
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