 MUMBAI, India (AP)
Call the city ‘Mumbai’ or else...: Sena chief
What’s in a name? Everything, according to a powerful party boss in
Mumbai and his hordes of violent followers.
Bal Thackeray, a regional politician who 13 years ago led the charge to
change the name of India’s financial capital from Bombay to Mumbai, has
demanded that city fathers drop ‘Bombay’ from prominent institutions
where the name still lingers _ or else.
“We are warning people intoxicated by the name of Bombay,” Thackeray
wrote in an editorial Wednesday in the newspaper published by his Shiv
Sena party. “This warning should be sufficient. Those that don’t
understand the warning may find they don’t have a path to escape
tomorrow.” Thackeray has been linked to waves of mob violence in the
past, so police are taking his threats seriously.
He has high-profile targets in his sights: the Bombay Stock Exchange,
the Bombay High Court, the elite Bombay Scottish School and countless
restaurants, shops and offices.
More than two dozen Shiv Sena supporters were arrested Tuesday while
demonstrating outside the stock exchange.
Earlier, activists broke the signs of textile manufacturer Bombay
Dyeing while another group scrawled “Mumbai Scottish” across the walls
of the Bombay Scottish School.
Using the Shiv Sena newspaper as a mouthpiece, Thackeray led a
nationalist campaign to drop what he calls the colonially tainted name
Bombay – a Portuguese derivation of “beautiful bay” – and replace it
with Mumbai, after the local Marathi language name for a Hindu goddess.
The city is the capital of Maharashtra state.
Civic leaders dismissed Thackeray’s call as an inflammatory stunt.
Bombay Stock Exchange officials said they were not considering a name
change.
“This is purely an attempt to pressurize institutions,” said V.M.
Sukhthankar of the local civic group Agni. “They are trying to raise
useless, sentimental issues ... that will temporarily excite and
inflame people. Why don’t they speak about poverty, drought, instead of
raking up baseless issues?” India went through a wave of name-changing
in the 1990s for cities large and small, including Chennai, formerly
Madras, and Kolkata, formerly Calcutta.
The name “Mumbai” has been widely adopted here, though it’s still
common to hear “Bombay,” especially in cosmopolitan corners of the city.
In the editorial, headlined “Slaves of Bombay,” Thackeray said those
who use the old name “are against Maharashtra and Mumbai.” “I don’t
know why they don’t like the name Mumbai ... the whole world has
accepted Mumbai,” wrote Thackeray, a former newspaper cartoonist.
Thackeray, 82, is an eccentric leader who poses with tiger skins and
oversized sunglasses in his campaign posters. At the height of his
power a decade ago, he had a virtual army at his fingertips and could
shut down this city of more than 18 million with a phone call.
The Shiv Sena _ which means Shiva’s Army _ has lost some of its
influence in recent years. But they remain a force in Mumbai, where
they combine Hindu fundamentalism with regional chauvinism and
occasional violence.
Their primary objective is to keep people who are not from Maharashtra
out of the state. They often attack north Indian migrants working as
taxi drivers and labourers in Mumbai.
Last update on: 16-5-2008 |