No compromise on Kashmir, but battle not with people: Ram Madhav

BJP General Secretary and party in charge of Jammu and Kashmir Ram Madhav said that there could be no compromise on Kashmir issue and asserted that the battle was not with the agitating people whom he termed as our people and blamed pro-Pakistani elements for the present situation.

CHENNAI: BJP General Secretary and party in charge of Jammu and Kashmir Ram Madhav said here today that there could be no compromise on Kashmir issue and asserted that the "battle" was not with the agitating people whom he termed as "our people," and blamed pro-Pakistani elements for the present situation.

"You have to work for nation, its good and unity. Like Yudhishtra or somebody you cannot compromise on Kashmir. It is yours, you have to work for it, but when you say Kashmir is yours, the people in Kashmir is also yours," he said.

Madhav quoted how in Mahabharat, Yudhistra was willing for a compromise with Kauravas, and then in an apparent reference to the present unrest, he said "today they are pelting stones, no doubt, but they are misled."

Using metaphors vis-a-vis Kashmir and Mahabharat, he said,"they (stone-pelters) happen to be on Kaurava's side whether they wanted it or not, they were on that side."

Hitting out at pro-Pakistan elements for fomenting trouble again by employing similes, he said "your fight is with Kaurava's, who happen to have some connection with Khandahar and Gandhari, and all that across the border. You have your battle with them, you will fight it out, but your battle is not with people, they are our people, because this nation is one."

In his lecture on 'Nationalism, Internationalism and Bhagwad Gita,' organised here by Chinmaya Mission as part of its 'Gita Mahotsav-Swami Chinmayananda's (1916-2016) Birth anniversary celebrations,' he said the message of the revered text was for the entire mankind.

Stating that Gita's message does not stop with a nation, he said it transcended to "Loka Kalyan, or Vasudhaiva Kudumbhakam, its message is for the entire mankind."

Recalling how Gita's message inspired a range of freedom fighters including a pacifist like Mahathma Gandhi, and revolutionaries like Aurobindo and Bal Gangadhar Tilak, he said, "it has as much profound message for today as it was for Gandhiji and other freedom fighters including revolutionaries like Tilak."

He also rued opposition to make Gita a national text.

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