Like winter clothes brought out from mothballs after Diwali, the ‘Vajpayee line’—hibernating since the BJP’s defeat in May—subtly re-emerged this evening as the former Prime Minister threw open the lawns of his new Krishna Menon Marg residence to host the last Iftar of this season. A mellow Vajpayee, dressed in kurta pyjama instead of the usual dhoti, answered a host of questions on Uma Bharati and the arrest of the Shankaracharya. But more than what he actually said, it was his decision to host an Iftar today that imbued the evening with far-reaching political significance. Ignoring the directive from the RSS to return to Hindutva and the vituperative attacks from the VHP against him personally, Vajpayee made it clear that his pre-election efforts to project a ‘‘moderate’’ and Muslim-friendly face would continue even out of power. That he chose to host the Iftar, organised by Shahnawaz Hussain who was recently reprimanded by the party chief for indiscipline, a day after the Kanchi Shankaracharya was arrested was particularly significant. In fact, one reporter aggressively asked Vajpayee why he was “celebrating” when a Hindu seer had been humiliated. The former PM did not deign to reply to the question but it is bound to be raised by hotheads in the Sangh Parivar in the days to come. The evening was not just a gesture to the minorities; it was equally a signal to NDA allies that the BJP would not entirely abandon the Vajpayee path in search of its “core constituency.” While BJP leaders such as L K Advani and Murli Manohar Joshi were conspicuous by their absence, NDA allies such as Nitish Kumar and Sharad Yadav turned up for the occasion. The JD(U) duo’s presence was particularly notable because they are known to have major misgivings about continuing an alliance with the BJP if the party returns to Hindutva. On Uma, he’s firm, gentle & witty