| The Rediff Special/Shobha Warrier
  'Let this amma lead us first. Then I am sure her daughter 
will lead us. Only this family can rule us. They are born to rule us!'
 Many came on their own, 
many were brought -- but still, there 
weren't too many around on Sunday, January 11, at Sriperumbudur to hear 
Sonia Gandhi.  
Just a 12,000-odd crowd, unimpressive by any standards but 
more so considering that it was the Congress's mega-show, 
its magnum opus. 
Yet, the crowd in itself was interesting. It was 
a mela of people from 
all over, from Erode and Vandaloor, from Delhi and Bombay, from Italy and England. A  mela wherein the blind faith of the poor 
rubbed shoulders with calculated 
emotions. Rediff On The NeT's Shobha Warrier was 
there to capture the mood, to bring over 
vignettes from Sriperumbudur... 
 
The woman over there, yes, she who's staring at 
the podium so intently, she is from 
Vandaloor. She can't, just can't, 
take her eyes off the duo on stage.
 
 "No, I don't know madam's name. They did not tell me 
that, just brought us down here," 
she tells me breathlessly in Tamil, "Seeing madam is 
such a satisfying experience -- 
she is so fair and queen-like. Who is the girl sitting next 
to her? You mean 
that beautiful girl is her daughter? Oh, she is so beautiful! I think 
I'll vote for her." 
All around, cries of amma and thaye (mother) render the air 
while Sonia and Priyanka, both calm, collected and matter-of-fact, stand surrounded by 
this teeming mass of humanity. The woman from Vandaloor 
is still gushing about 
the 'tomato-red' skin of the mother and daughter. Nearby, another group -- probably 'brought' from somewhere -- are least bothered about what is happening and manages 
a snooze.
 
I make my way through the crowd till I spot another 
lady who is ready to talk. This is Junamma. Her association with the 
Congress started 'long, long ago'. But the chord was severed 
after Rajiv Gandhi's assassination. Sonia's decision to campaign 
prompted her 
to return to the Congress. 
 
"I was willing to die for the party once. Whenever I was a trouble it 
was the Congress which bailed 
me out. All that was during amma's (Indira Gandhi's) time," she says. 
 
The present leaders, she continues, are so corrupt that even a die-hard worker 
like her feels alienated. They are interested in only making money for themselves 
and don't care a damn about poor people. 
 
 "I have 200 per cent trust in Sonia Gandhi. They are our royal family and they 
are very rich. Do you think they need more money? Those who 
live in the midst of wealth will never rob 
the poor," she reasons, "Let this amma lead us first. 
Then I am sure her daughter 
will lead us. Only this family can rule us, nobody else. They are born to rule us!" 
Rujamani, another Nehru-Gandhi family loyalist who came down from Erode, 
agrees. For her, this is a 'magic' moment, an 'emotional' one, one which she 
is going to 'cherish'.
 
"Seven years!" she sighs, "But I never expected to see 
her daughter. She looks so 
much like Indira Gandhi that I feel like crying. Only this family can help 
us. Indira Gandhi was like a goddess and she blessed us like a goddess.  
Once Sonia becomes our prime minister, corruption will disappear, the price of 
rice will come down and the life of the poor will better." 
 
Earlier while coming in, I had a strange experience: I have heard about 
politicians being mobbed by journalists, but it was the other way 
round. As we squeezed through 
the barricade, khadi-clad Congressmen stopped us. They wanted us to 
write about Sonia in BIG letters. 
 
"This is going to be the most important event in Indian history. Sonia 
Gandhi should take over the party leadership and then be our 
prime minister. Only she 
can save our country from disintegration," they told us.
 
"Who says she is a foreigner? She is not," the session went on, "The moment she 
was our dear Rajiv Gandhi's wife, she became an Indian. She is as Indian as 
all of us. She will be our prime minister till our sister Priyanka is ready to take over. 
Why do you have any doubt about the credentials of the family? This is our royal 
family. Only they can rule our country in prosperity. Can you name a single leader 
who is at par with Sonia Gandhi? She is our queen and we will 
worship her."
 
All of them then began shouting zindabad to Sonia and Priyanka 
and I managed to escape...
 
 I am roaming the crowd again, and I come across people of 
my trade, people who 
have come all the way from Italy. Sonia might be an Indian, she might be a 
queen, she 
might be everything to the  
Congress workers; but to the Italians she is 
still an Italian. And they have come fully equipped to picturise the 'emotional 
moment' when Sonia stands at the place where her 
husband was brutally assassinated. 
Douiela Beeg from the Italian women's magazine Doli Rejuheico is 
intrigued at the Indian-ness that Sonia is projecting.
   
"It is a great human interest story for us," she says, "Can she really be 
an Indian like all of you? By wearing an Indian dress, 
can you change your identity? We are looking into that angle."
 
Beeg says many of her countrymen feel that Sonia 
stands a good chance of becoming the prime minister. "We also feel this is 
a launching pad for her daughter. Italians do not know much about her children. They 
are not interested either," she says, "They are only interested in her story."
 
 To Botti Ettore of the leading Italian daily Corriere Dellasera, Sonia's story 
is cover-page material. Hers is a fairy tale, it has all the right 
ingredients. Imagine a poor girl, 
far away from her country 
falling in love with a rich prince, subsequently marrying him 
and settling down in an alien land. The happily-ever part is only till 1991... 
"We call her Cindrella back home. We call her story a love story, a blood story and 
a sad story. Real opera material," Ettore says, "India is such a far country to Italians. And suddenly they find that an Italian has a chance to 
lead it. Naturally, their curiosity is kindled. They see her as an Italian 
only, definitely not as an Indian. How can she be an Indian just because she is married 
to a rich Indian prince?"  
 
"Do you know," Ettore continues, "these days Italian papers are after her 
parents, sister and old teachers. Her school teachers remembered, 
rather surprisingly, that she was just an average student.  
Italians are interested only in her, not in Indian politics."
 
What brings The Independent's Delhi correspondent 
Peter Pophar to Sriperumbudur is Sonia's association with the Gandhis.  
 
"She is the widow of the Gandhi family. That's what interests us," he says, "People (in England) know about the family very well. And a name like Sonia Gandhi strikes 
an instant chord."
 
I take his leave and go hunting again. Soon I meet Kesavan, who has 
come from his far-away village not out of curiosity. To him, and thousands like him, 
Sonia is a saviour. She symbolises strength. She symbolises courage.
She is the only person who can bring unity in 
India. The only person who can 
lower the price of rice and vegetables. The only one, the 
only choice for the nation...
 
Photographs: Sriram Selvaraj
 
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