Intentar ORO - Gratis
Modi's Failure
The Atlantic
|February 2025
Why India is losing faith in its strongman leader
On a winter afternoon in January 2024, Prime Minister Narendra Modi stood before a podium, gazing out at a handpicked audience of the Indian elite: billionaires, Bollywood actors, cricket stars, nationalist politicians.
Modi had come to the north-central city of Ayodhya, in the state of Uttar Pradesh, to consecrate the still-unfinished temple behind him, with its seven shrines, 160-foot-high dome, and baby-faced statue of the Hindu god Ram, carved in black stone and covered in jewels. He did not mention the fact that the temple was being built on a contested site where Hindu radicals had torn down a 16th-century mosque three decades earlier, setting off years of protests and legal struggle.
Instead, Modi described the temple as an emblem of India's present and future greatness-its rising economic might, its growing navy, its moon missions, and, most of all, its immense human energy and potential. The temple signified India's historic triumph over the "mentality of slavery," he said. This nation of nearly 1.5 billion was shedding its old secular creed and, despite the fact that 200 million of its citizens are Muslim, being reborn as a land of Hindunationalist ideals. "The generations after a thousand years will remember our nation-building efforts today," he told the crowd.
Among the tens of millions of Indians who watched that speech on TV was 42-year-old Luv Shukla, who lives on the edge of a small town about a three-hour drive from Ayodhya. I met him on a hot day in June, and we chatted while sitting in plastic chairs outside the tiny electronics shop he has run since he was 16.
Esta historia es de la edición February 2025 de The Atlantic.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE The Atlantic
The Atlantic
What Dante Is Trying to Tell Us
A colloquial translation of Paradiso might make people actually read it.
10 mins
February 2026
The Atlantic
Sense of an Ending
Julian Barnes says goodbye to the novel
9 mins
February 2026
The Atlantic
IS THIS WHAT PATRIOTISM LOOKS LIKE?
Why an ex—police officer assaulted a fellow cop on January 6
37 mins
February 2026
The Atlantic
THE PURGED
DONALD TRUMP'S DESTRUCTION OF THE CIVIL SERVICE IS A TRAGEDY NOT JUST FOR THE ROUGHLY 300,000 WORKERS WHO HAVE BEEN DISCARDED, BUT FOR AN ENTIRE NATION.
8 mins
February 2026
The Atlantic
GROUNDED
THE SPACE PROGRAM ENNOBLED AMERICAN CULTURE AND ADVANCED AMERICAN SCIENCE. DONALD TRUMP HAS CHOSEN TO END THAT ERA OF AMBITION.
17 mins
February 2026
The Atlantic
The New History of Fighting Slavery
What we learn by tracing rebellions from Africa to the Americas
10 mins
February 2026
The Atlantic
MICAELA WHITE
By the beginning of 2025, there was a famine in Sudan, which meant that it was only a matter of time before the U.S.government dispatched Micaela White to the scene. She was America's fixer of choice.
2 mins
February 2026
The Atlantic
WHAT JEFFREY EPSTEIN DIDN'T UNDERSTAND ABOUT LOLITA
Everything.
5 mins
February 2026
The Atlantic
Who Gets to Be Indian- And Who Decides?
The very American story of Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance
22 mins
February 2026
The Atlantic
I'm Not From the Government but I'm Here to Help
The Trump administration is trying to eliminate federal services? Fine. I'll do everything myself.
24 mins
February 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
