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'Ambedkar would have found notion of Ghar Vapsi abhorrent'
 
New Delhi, April 14 
 Former West Bengal governor
 Gopalkrishna Gandhi on Tuesday criticized attempts by various parties, 
especially of the right, to take the legacy of B.R. Ambedkar saying he 
would have found 'Ghar Vapsi' "abhorrent to the ethos of India".
The
 grandson of Mahatma Gandhi said the efforts by various parties to vye 
with each other in identifying with the legacy of Ambedkar was only 
intended to reap "electoral dividends".
"As for politicians, 
there is one compelling reason why they queue up to honour Babasaheb 
Ambedkar.. it is not love of the great man as much as love of electoral 
dividends which identification with that icon can bring," he said 
criticizing the Congress, Bharatiya Janata Party and other parties for 
trying to upstage each other in commemorating Ambedkar's 124th birth 
anniversary.
Speaking while unveiling the portrait of Ambedkar in
 the Supreme Court's main library, Gandhi contended that Ambedkar should
 be seen as a "mental phenomena that he was for whole of India, and not 
just section of  its population whose immiserations he sought to 
remove"."  
Besides eminent jurists including Fali Nariman, Ashok
 Desai and others, the function organised by Supreme Court Bar 
association was also attended by Justice Kurian Joseph.
Noting 
that the Congress "could neither ignore him, nor make him one of its 
own", Gandhi said that if Congress wanted to commemorate Ambedkar's 
birth anniversary, then it must regret opposing him in 1952 and 1954 
elections to Lok Sabha.
"...let the Congress at least be aware 
that the country has not forgotten the missed opportunities missed by it
 in 1952 and 1954. Our memories are short; they are not non-existent."
In
 a dig at right-wing politics, Gandhi said that Ambedkar would have 
"flayed the notion of Ghar Vapsi as abhorrent to the ethos of India".
Describing
 as a "farce" the attempt by right wing "religious revivalist, social 
status-quoist and economic monopolist" to usurp Ambedkar's legacy, 
Gandhi wondered if it was their respect for him that prompted them to 
say that.
Gandhi also said that some Dalit leaders may have a 
point in thinking that they have more right than others to invoke his 
legacy but they would be mistaken if they think that they have a greater
 right than others to exploit him.
 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	
 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		