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Modi opens G20 summit as PM of ‘Bharat’

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi made  his opening address to the G20 summit Saturday with his country nameplate  labelled “Bharat” — an ancient Sanskrit word — in the biggest signal yet of  a potential official change.

The gesture came days after invitations to the summit dinner were sent out in  the name of the “President of Bharat”, prompting rumours that official usage  of the country’s English name would be scrapped.

Modi himself typically refers to India as “Bharat”, a word steeped in Hindu  religious symbolism and dating back to scripture: in the Mahabharata, King  Dushyant and Shakuntala’s son was named “Bharat” and the kingdom he inherited  came to be known as “Bharatvarsha”.

Hindus are the overwhelming majority of India’s 1.4 billion population but many religious minorities, in particular its more than 200 million Muslims,  fear that Modi wants to remould India as a Hindu nation.

Zakia Soman, the co-founder of Bharatiya Muslim Mahila Andolan, a rights  group, said the potential name change reeked of yet more “polarising  politics” by the government.

“It takes away from the real issues and real problems faced by the people of  the country,” she told AFP.

“We’ve always been India and ‘Bharat’ both. By insisting only on ‘Bharat’,  they are trivialising our heritage and legacy.”

– ‘India, that is Bharat’ –

India and Bharat are both official names for the country under its  constitution, in which Article 1 opens with the phrase: “India, that is  Bharat.” but members of Modi’s Hindu nationalist party have campaigned against using  the better-known moniker, which has roots in Western antiquity and was  imposed during the British conquest.

Modi’s government has worked to remove any lingering symbols of British rule and Muslim heritage  from the country’s urban landscape, political institutions and history books since coming to power in 2014.

The northern city of Allahabad — named by Mughal ruler Akbar centuries ago was changed to the Sanskrit word Prayagraj in 2018. earlier this week, foreign minister S. Jaishankar seemed to support the idea  of shedding the name India.

“Bharat” he said, had “a meaning and understanding and a connotation that  comes with it and that is reflected in our Constitution as well,” the  Hindustan Times quoted him as saying on Wednesday.

Rumours of the plan were enough to spark a mix of anger from opposition lawmakers and enthusiastic support from other quarters.

“I hope the government will not be so foolish as to completely dispense with  ‘India’,” Shashi Tharoor of the opposition Congress party said on X, formerly  known as Twitter.

Former Test cricketer Virender Sehwag urged India’s cricket board to use  “Bharat” on team uniforms, writing: “India is a name given by the British (and) it has been long overdue to get our original name ‘Bharat’ back.”

 

 

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