A leader who has connected power to the people

Published By : Admin | September 22, 2025 | 12:10 IST

Narendra Modi’s rise in Indian politics cannot be understood through the traditional lens of privilege. Unlike many leaders nurtured in political dynasties, Mr. Modi and his leadership style emerged from the soil, shaped by his struggle, years of grass-root level work, and field experience across different levels of government. His career represents not just the ascent of one man but also a challenge to the very foundation of elite-driven politics in India.

Early signs of leadership
Born in a modest household in Vadnagar, Mr. Modi’s childhood was marked by responsibility and simplicity. From setting up charity stalls in aid of flood victims to writing a play on caste discrimination as a schoolboy, he displayed an exceptional mix of organisational acumen and social concern at a young age. He also ran campaigns to collect used books and uniforms for underprivileged classmates — an early sign that he was already thinking about leadership in terms of service, and not as a privilege. These small efforts foreshadowed the approach he would carry into public life.

His grassroots instincts were sharpened in the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), where ordinary workers were instructed to interact with villagers, live as they lived, and earn trust through their conduct. As a young pracharak, Mr. Modi did exactly that. Often travelling across Gujarat by bus or scooter, and depending on villagers for food and shelter, he built trust across the board through shared hardship and struggle. This discipline kept him rooted in the everyday concerns of the people he was looking to serve, and it prepared him to lead effectively when crises demanded organised, large-scale responses.

One such crisis was when the Machhu Dam collapsed in 1979, killing thousands. A 29-year-old Mr. Modi immediately mobilised volunteers in shifts, organised relief materials, retrieved bodies, and consoled families. A few years later, during a drought in Gujarat, he spearheaded the Sukhdi Abhiyan, which expanded across the State, distributing food worth nearly ₹25 crore. In both disasters, he built large-scale relief efforts from scratch, demonstrating his clarity of purpose, his military-style organisation, and his insistence that leadership meant service, not just symbolism.

While these earlier episodes tested his ability to mobilise people, the Emergency tested his courage under repression. At just 25, disguised as a Sikh, he maintained communication between activists and leaders seeking to evade police surveillance. This grassroots network kept resistance to the draconian regime alive, earning him a reputation as a master organiser.

Applications in electoral politics
The same skills were soon channelled into electoral politics. As the Bharatiya Janata Party’s Gujarat’s sangathan mantri (organising secretary), he expanded the party across new communities, including those who were marginalised in political discourse. He nurtured leaders from diverse backgrounds, consolidated ground-level support, and helped in planning major events such as the L.K. Advani’s Somnath-Ayodhya Rath Yatra across Gujarat. Later, as prabhari (in-charge) in different States, he built strong party machines rooted at the booth level.

When he became Gujarat’s Chief Minister in 2001, Mr. Modi applied these lessons to governance. Hours after taking office, for instance, he had convened a meeting on bringing Narmada water to Sabarmati, indicating how decisive action would come to define his administration.

His approach was to make governance into a people’s movement, where the Praveshotsav encouraged school enrolment, Kanya Kelavani supported girls’ education, Garib Kalyan Melas took welfare to citizens, and Krishi Rath brought agricultural support to farmers’ fields. Bureaucrats were pushed out of offices into towns and villages. He remains of the view that governance must reach people where they live, and not stay confined to conference rooms.

Policy as partnership
These experiments in Gujarat became national templates once he became Prime Minister. His experience with cleanliness campaigns evolved into the Swachh Bharat Mission, where he picked up the broom himself to turn symbolism into mass action.

Digital India, Jan-Dhan Yojana, and other initiatives were not top-down programmes but people’s movements rooted in the learnings from his years spent at the grassroots. They embodied his philosophy of jan bhagidari, where governance works only when citizens become participants rather than passive recipients. This trust between a leader such as Mr. Modi and the people, cultivated over decades, is what has turned policy into partnership in today’s India.

Over the decades, Mr. Modi has shown a rare instinct for knowing what people need and how to deliver it, not from drawing-room debates, but from lived connection with the ground. That instinct, combined with hard administrative experience, has come to define his politics.

Ultimately, his life and leadership rewrite the idea that Indian politics belongs only to elites. He has become a symbol of merit and hard work, and brought governance closer to ordinary people. His political strength lies in connecting power to the people. In doing so, he has reshaped Indian politics, rooted in the struggles and the spirit of the common citizen.

Explore More
ਸ੍ਰੀ ਰਾਮ ਜਨਮ-ਭੂਮੀ ਮੰਦਿਰ ਧਵਜਾਰੋਹਣ ਉਤਸਵ ਦੌਰਾਨ ਪ੍ਰਧਾਨ ਮੰਤਰੀ ਦੇ ਭਾਸ਼ਣ ਦਾ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ ਅਨੁਵਾਦ

Popular Speeches

ਸ੍ਰੀ ਰਾਮ ਜਨਮ-ਭੂਮੀ ਮੰਦਿਰ ਧਵਜਾਰੋਹਣ ਉਤਸਵ ਦੌਰਾਨ ਪ੍ਰਧਾਨ ਮੰਤਰੀ ਦੇ ਭਾਸ਼ਣ ਦਾ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ ਅਨੁਵਾਦ
India's Q2 FY26 GDP soars 8.2%: A structural shift reshaping the economy like ’83 cricket triumph

Media Coverage

India's Q2 FY26 GDP soars 8.2%: A structural shift reshaping the economy like ’83 cricket triumph
NM on the go

Nm on the go

Always be the first to hear from the PM. Get the App Now!
...
India and natural farming…the way ahead!
December 03, 2025

In August this year, a group of farmers from Tamil Nadu met me and talked about how they were practising new agricultural techniques to boost sustainability and productivity. They invited me to a Summit on natural farming to be held in Coimbatore. I accepted their invite and promised them that I would be among them during the programme. Thus, a few weeks ago, on 19th November, I was in the lovely city of Coimbatore, attending the South India Natural Farming Summit 2025. A city known as an MSME backbone was hosting a big event on natural farming.

Natural farming, as we all know, draws from India’s traditional knowledge systems and modern ecological principles to cultivate crops without synthetic chemicals. It promotes diversified fields where plants, trees and livestock coexist to support natural biodiversity. The approach relies on recycling farm residues and enhancing soil health through mulching and aeration, rather than external inputs.

This Summit in Coimbatore will forever remain a part of my memory! It indicated a shift in mindset, imagination and confidence with which India’s farmers and agri-entrepreneurs are shaping the future of agriculture.

The programme included an interaction with farmers from Tamil Nadu, in which they showcased their efforts in natural farming and I was amazed!

I was struck by the fact that people from diverse backgrounds, including scientists, FPO leaders, first-generation graduates, traditional cultivators and notably people who had left high-paying corporate careers, decided to return to their roots and pursue natural farming.

I met people whose life journeys and commitment to doing something new were noteworthy.

There was a farmer who managed nearly 10 acres of multi-layered agriculture with bananas, coconuts, papaya, pepper and turmeric. He maintains 60 desi cows, 400 goats and local poultry.

Another farmer has dedicated himself to preserving native rice varieties like Mapillai Samba and Karuppu Kavuni. He focuses on value-added products, creating health mixes, puffed rice, chocolates and protein bars.

There was a first-generation graduate who runs a 15-acre natural farm and has trained over 3,000 farmers, supplying nearly 30 tonnes of vegetables every month.

Some people who were running their own FPOs supported tapioca farmers and promoted tapioca-based products as a sustainable raw material for bioethanol and Compressed Biogas.

One of the agri-innovators was a biotechnology professional who built a seaweed-based biofertilizer enterprise employing 600 fishermen across coastal districts; another developed nutrient-enriched bioactive biochar that boosts soil health. They both showed how science and sustainability can blend seamlessly.

The people I met there belonged to different backgrounds, but there was one thing in common: a complete commitment to soil health, sustainability, community upliftment and a deep sense of enterprise.

At a larger level, India has made commendable progress in the field. Last year, the Government of India launched the National Mission on Natural Farming, which has already connected lakhs of farmers with sustainable practices. Across the nation, thousands of hectares are under natural farming. Efforts by the Government such as encouraging exports, institutional credit being expanded significantly through the Kisan Credit Card (including for livestock and fisheries) and PM-Kisan, have also helped farmers pursuing natural farming.

Natural farming is also closely linked to our efforts to promote Shri Anna or millets. What is also gladdening is the fact that women farmers are taking to natural farming in a big way.

Over the past few decades, the rising dependence on chemical fertilisers and pesticides has affected soil fertility, moisture and long-term sustainability. At the same time, farming costs have steadily increased. Natural farming directly addresses these challenges. The use of Panchagavya, Jeevamrit, Beejamrit, and mulching protects soil health, reduces chemical exposure, and lowers input costs while building strength against climate change and erratic weather patterns.

I encouraged farmers to begin with ‘one acre, one season.’ The outcomes from even a small plot can build confidence and inspire larger adoption. When traditional wisdom, scientific validation and institutional support come together, natural farming can become feasible and transformative.

I call upon all of you to think of pursuing natural farming. You can do this by being associated with FPOs, which are becoming strong platforms for collective empowerment. You can explore a StartUp relating to this area.

Seeing the convergence between farmers, science, entrepreneurship and collective action in Coimbatore was truly inspiring. And, I am sure we will together continue making our agriculture and allied sectors productive and sustainable. If you know of teams working on natural farming, do let me know too!