Headlines
Ezhava leader to meet Modi on October 1
Thiruvananthapuram, Sep 29
Kerala's Hindu
Ezhava community leader Vellapally Natesan would meet Prime Minister
Narendra Modi in Delhi on Thursday, a BJP leader said here.
"He
is going to Delhi to meet the prime minister, though we do not know of
any political aspect to the meeting. Natesan and (BJP president) Amit
Shah had a talk at Kollam on Sunday," said state BJP spokesperson V.V.
Rajesh on Tuesday.
Natesan, his son and state BJP president V.
Muraleedharan had a 45-minute meeting with Amit Shah on Sunday at the
ashram of Mata Amritananda Maa near Kollam.
Natesan and his son
Tushar Vellapally had fixed an appointment with the prime minister
earlier too, but it did not happen due to sudden demise of former
president A.P.J. Abdul Kalam on July 27. The father-son duo then met
with Shah.
Natesan, the supreme leader of the powerful Sree
Narayana Dharma Paripalana (SNDP) Sangom that owes allegiance to social
reformer Sree Narayana Guru, has put many on tenterhooks ever since he
expressed his desire to form a political party.
In Kerala, Hindus
constitute over 50 percent of the 3.30 crore population. Members of the
Ezhava community are slightly ahead of the Hindu Nair community in the
numbers game.
Ever since the political outfit of the Ezhavas -
Socialist Republican Party - and Hindu Nairs' National Democratic Party
petered out in the mid-80s after flourishing for a decade or so, the two
communities in Kerala have been left in the lurch.
Natesan has
been trying to bring together various Hindu social groups for a while.
But after the Nair community leadership last week made it clear that
they were not interested in a political outfit, Natesan decided to go
ahead with his plan.
While the Kerala unit of the BJP has
welcomed SNDP plan to form a political party, the Congress is yet to
make an official statement on the issue.
The Communist Party of
India-Marxist is clearly unhappy and has cautioned the SNDP cadres that
any attempt to take the group towards the BJP would be against the
ideology of their master, social reformer Sree Narayana Guru.