Its excellent that he stayed because he has done some immense work as an educationist. Hopefully he will bring about some much needed reforms as well as a new thinking to the old institution which afterall world renowned in the Muslim world.
However the bolded part is not completely correct and was the impression was a result of a false report from a TOI jounalist that began the controversy. You know how jounalists are. Here is the clarification he issued afterwards.
Move ahead, leave Gujarat riots behind: Deoband Rector
Patna: A week after getting elected as rector (vice-chancellor) of Darul Uloom Deoband, Maulana Ghulam Mohammed Vastanvi, seems to have courted a controversy by saying All is Well in Gujarat under chief minister Narendra Modi, an accused in the 2002 anti-Muslim pogrom.
A leading English daily quoted the Maulana in a news report on 19th Jan. 2011 as saying: All communities are prospering in Gujarat and there is no discrimination against the minorities in the state as far as development is concerned.
When TwoCircles.net contacted MBA degree holder Maulana Vastanvi to verify his statement in Times of India the Surat (Gujarat)-based cleric said: “Muslims are doing businesses here. They are getting education. There has been no violence in the last eight years. They are living peacefully in Gujarat. Now tell me my son, what should I say? Should I say Muslims are oppressed here, they are facing atrocities. If I say so, Modi will ask me where are the oppressed Muslims, and then how many such Muslims will stand behind me?
“Why should I create a controversy by saying everything is wrong in the state and nothing is good for Muslims?” he asked.
On the Gujarat riots also he reiterated his views: The riots happened eight years ago. It was wrong. It brought bad repute to the state and the country. “But what should we do now? Should we sit and weep or should we move ahead? But it does not mean the guilty should not be punished. Those involved in the riots should be punished and justice should reach the victims,” said Maulana Vastanvi who has been elected rector of Deoband after the death of Maulana Marghoobur Rahman last month.
However, on the issue of relief to riot victims, the Maulana said his complete views were not published by the paper. “As far as relief work riot is concerned, it has been carried out very well by government and people of Gujarat,” the TOI had quoted him as saying.
When TCN asked him how he can say so when several hundreds of riot victims are still reported to be living in relief camps, the Maulana said this was not his complete view. “I had also said that the victims should be rehabilitated. Houses should be built for those whose homes were looted, put on fire and destroyed,” he said.
According to the Maulana, he had also demanded release of innocent Muslim youths who have been put behind bars in terror cases but this also did not get space. There are hundreds of Muslims languishing in Gujarat jails in terror cases.
Another article with a direct quote from him
'Riots unfortunate, but Muslims need to move on' - Rediff.com India News
Maulana Gulam Mohammad Vastanvi, the vice chancellor of Darul Uloom Deoband, on Thursday clarified that he will not resign from his post.
Vastanvi had faced strong criticism for his alleged comments about Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi. The Urdu press had quoted the Maulana as saying that Muslims should forget the post-2002 Godhra communal riots and move on. He also reportedly said that the community did not face discrimination in Gujarat.
Speaking to rediff.com on the telephone from Vadodara in Gujarat, the VC said that he had not put in his papers, but had "merely told reporters he was considering it."
The cleric told rediff.com that he did say that Modi had brought development to Gujarat but "never said that the Muslim community did not face discrimination in the state."
"I never gave a clean chit to Narendra Modi. All I said was that he had brought development to the state. The statements I made were badly misrepresented in the Urdu press. You can read the interview I gave to that Urdu newspaper. In that, not even in a single place can you see me give a clean chit to Modi. Yes, the riots were extremely unfortunate and unfair to Muslims. They do need justice for it, but in the meantime, they need to move on as well," Vastanvi told rediff.com.
Speaking about his earlier decision to quit as the VC, Vastanvi said that he wanted to resign keeping the welfare of the students at Deoband in mind.
"Darul Uloom is a big institution with a lot of students. Because of the controversy I found myself in, I did not want to affect the welfare of my students. I had not put in my papers; I had merely told reporters that I was considering it. Hearing the news, many of my well wishers in Deoband and other places advised me not to (resign), as I could really contribute to Deoband with my experience and bring in some positive changes. They showed me that my resignation will not solve anything and that I could help more if I stayed on. So I decided not to tender my resignation. Of course, the Majlis-e-Soora (governing council) is meeting on February 23 to take a decision on this. Till then, I will continue as the VC," Vastanvi said.
Vastanvi, who was elected VC on January 10, faced protests from students at the 200-year-old seminary after news about his reported remarks spread.
"Yes, there was some violence and I was upset about it. In fact, those protests were one of the primary reasons I wanted to quit. But my well-wishers made me see that there are a lot of students in this institution and hardly some 15-20 students protested. They were, no doubt, provoked, but the majority did not protest. So I decided to stay on for them," Vastanvi said.
Vastanvi, who is not a traditional cleric, is active on social networking sites and also holds a MBA. He has also faced opposition for not being a Qasimi (a follower of the founder of Deoband, Maulana Qasim Nanautvi), though he has been with the Deoband since 1998.
Vastanvi arrived in Vadodara on Thursday from Delhi.
Speaking of the warm reception he received in Vadodara, he said, "There were a large number of people who gave me a warm welcome when I came. I hope I will receive the love and care of people in the future as well."