PM Modi Invokes Syama Prasad Mookerjee After BJP's Landmark Win in West Bengal

Prime Minister Narendra Modi declared a historic victory for the BJP in West Bengal, invoking the soul of party founder Syama Prasad Mookerjee. Modi said the win fulfills Mookerjee's decades-old dream of a strong and prosperous Bengal free from fear. Mookerjee founded the Bharatiya Jana Sangh in 1951 after resigning from Nehru's cabinet over the Liaquat-Nehru Pact. The BJP views this electoral success as the ultimate validation of Mookerjee's mission to keep West Bengal integrated with India.

Key Points: PM Modi on Mookerjee's Soul at Peace After Bengal Win

  • PM Modi invokes Syama Prasad Mookerjee's legacy after Bengal win
  • BJP views victory as fulfillment of Mookerjee's 1951 mission
  • Mookerjee founded Bharatiya Jana Sangh, BJP's predecessor
  • Modi says Bengal is now free from fear and confident in development
4 min read

"Shyama Prasad Mookerjee's soul must be at so much peace today...": PM Modi after lotus blooms in West Bengal

PM Modi declares BJP's West Bengal win fulfills Syama Prasad Mookerjee's dream, marking a new chapter for the state. Read key quotes and analysis.

"s and analysis.QUOTE: The soul of Shyama Prasad Mookerjee must be at so much peace today. - PM Narendra Modi"

New Delhi, May 4

The political landscape of India shifted on Monday as Prime Minister Narendra Modi declared a "new chapter" for West Bengal. While the victory was won in the polling booths of the present, the rhetoric of the day looked back nearly eighty years to the man whose ideological DNA remains the bedrock of the Bharatiya Janata Party, Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee.

In a victory speech charged with emotion, PM Modi invoked Mookerjee's soul, suggesting that the election results were the final fulfilment of a struggle that began during the Partition of India.

"Today, as a BJP worker, another thought keeps coming to my mind. The soul of Shyama Prasad Mookerjee must be at so much peace today. Mookerjee fought a major battle to keep West Bengal a part of India. The dream he envisioned of a strong and prosperous Bengal had been waiting to be fulfilled for decades. Today, on May 4, 2026, the people of Bengal have given us, the BJP workers, that opportunity. A new chapter has been added to Bengal's destiny. From today, Bengal is free from fear. It is filled with the confidence of development," he said.

To understand why the BJP views a win in West Bengal as a spiritual homecoming, one must look at Mookerjee's pivotal role in the mid-20th century.

In 1947, as the partition of India became inevitable, Mookerjee famously campaigned against the "United Bengal" plan that might have seen the entire province join Pakistan. He argued that if India were to be divided on religious lines, the Hindu-majority areas of Bengal must remain with India.

After resigning from Jawaharlal Nehru's cabinet in 1950 over the Liaquat-Nehru Pact, Mookerjee sought to create a political alternative. He turned to M.S. Golwalkar, the second Sarsanghchalak of the RSS, for support.

In 1951, with the blessing and organisational "pracharaks" (volunteers) of the RSS, Mookerjee founded the Bharatiya Jana Sangh. This organisation was the direct predecessor of the modern-day BJP, which was later formed in 1980.

His slogan, "Ek desh mein do Vidhan, do Pradhan aur do Nishan nahi chalenge" (One country cannot have two constitutions, two leaders, and two flags), was the driving force behind the 2019 abrogation of Article 370.

He championed the idea that Indian identity is rooted in its civilizational heritage, a core tenet of the RSS's Hindutva philosophy. He envisioned a Bengal that was an industrial and intellectual powerhouse, free from the "fear" that the BJP claims characterised the state's later decades under Left and TMC rule.

For the BJP, the victory in Bengal is more than just seats in the Assembly; it is the ultimate validation of the mission started by Mookerjee in 1951. By winning in the land of their founder's birth, the party claims to have finally completed the "historic battle" for the soul of Bengal.

Earlier, PM Modi lauded the BJP's strong performance in the West Bengal assembly polls and NDA's victories in Assam and Puducherry and said the "day is historic, unprecedented".

"Today is a historic day. It is unprecedented. When years of efforts turn into success, the happiness that is seen on the faces of people is the same happiness that I see on the faces of BJP workers across the country today," he said.

"As a party worker, I share the joy of every BJP worker. Today is a special day in many ways. It marks the announcement of a bright future for the country. This is a day of trust. Trust in India's great democracy. Trust in the politics of performance. Trust in the spirit of 'Ek Bharat Shrestha Bharat'," he added.

Counting of votes was taken up today for assembly polls in Assam, West Bengal, Keralam, Tamil Nadu and Puducherry. BJP has also improved its performance in Keralam.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sneha F
While I respect Dr. Mookerjee's contribution, the way PM Modi invokes him every time feels a bit too theatrical. Let's focus on real issues like unemployment and inflation instead of emotional speeches. Bengal needs jobs, not just slogans.
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James A
Interesting to see how Indian politics connects present victories to historical figures. From an outsider's perspective, the emotional weight of partition still shapes Bengal's politics even after 80 years. Power of civilizational memory.
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Rohan X
"Ek desh mein do Vidhan" - this line from Dr. Mookerjee resonates even more after Article 370 abrogation. The man was truly ahead of his times! 🔥 BJP has finally completed what he started - truly a historic moment for Bengal and India.
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Riya H
As a Bengali, I have mixed feelings. Yes, there was fear under TMC and Left rule for sure. But replacing one kind of fear with another isn't progress. Let's hope BJP's "development" actually benefits the common people and not just their party workers.
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Michael C
I've been following Indian elections and this claim of "free from fear" is interesting. Every state has its own political culture. Let's see if they can actually deliver on infrastructure and employment - the real measure of governance.
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