PM Modi urges West Bengal youth to reclaim Syama Prasad Mookerjee's legacy on June 20
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday, 20 June called on the youth of West Bengal to understand the historical significance of June 20 as Bengal Foundation Day, asserting that successive governments — the Indian National Congress (Congress), the Left Front, and the All India Trinamool Congress (TMC) — had deliberately sought to erase the contributions of Jana Sangh founder Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee from the state's collective memory. Modi made the remarks while addressing a public gathering at Tarakeswar in Hooghly district, West Bengal.
The Historical Significance of June 20
Modi recalled that on 20 June 1947, Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee moved a pivotal proposal in the West Bengal Legislative Assembly to partition the province and integrate West Bengal into India. The Prime Minister argued this act was foundational to keeping West Bengal part of the Indian Union.
'In the past, there were deliberate attempts to suppress history. Bengal had endured riots, division and bloodshed. Many people died in the Noakhali riots. Congress succumbed to the conspiracy. Only Dr Shyama Prasad Mukherjee was vocal against the conspiracy,' Modi said at the gathering.
Attack on Previous Governments Over Infiltration
Modi accused all three preceding political formations in the state of enabling illegal infiltration. 'First, the Congress regime in West Bengal, then that of the Left Front and finally the Trinamool Congress regime in the state made West Bengal a free land for illegal infiltrators. All these three forces tried to suppress the role played by Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee in keeping West Bengal a part of India,' he said.
He added that the new Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government is committed not only to halting fresh infiltration but also to expelling those already present illegally. 'Now the work of installing barbed wire on the border has started,' Modi said.
The Foundation Day Dispute
The choice of June 20 as Bengal Foundation Day is itself contested. The previous TMC government led by Mamata Banerjee had observed Poila Boishakh — the Bengali New Year — as the state's foundation day, a date that shifts on the English calendar each year. The new BJP-led state government under Chief Minister Suvendu Adhikari has fixed June 20 as the official date, citing its historical resonance with Mookerjee's 1947 assembly motion.
Banerjee has opposed the June 20 date, arguing it evokes the pain of Partition for many in the state. The BJP has countered that a foundation day must be anchored in verifiable historical significance rather than cultural sentiment alone.
Modi on West Bengal's New Political Direction
Speaking at the Tarakeswar rally, Modi framed the BJP's recent West Bengal Assembly election victory as a turning point for the state's development trajectory. 'The people of West Bengal have been freed from the shackles of subjugation. The people of West Bengal are now independent. The old glory of West Bengal is returning,' he said, adding that stalled projects had resumed and that the state was 'moving towards development at a super-fast pace' under what he called the 'double-engine government.'
With the BJP now in power in both the state and at the Centre, Modi's Tarakeswar address signals that the historical narrative around Mookerjee and Bengal's integration into India will be a central pillar of the party's political identity in the state going forward.