Babu Jagjivan Ram

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[[Category: India |B]]
 
[[Category: India |B]]
[[Category: History |B]]
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[[Category: Politics |B]]
 
[[Category: Biography |B]]
 
[[Category: Biography |B]]
[[Category:Name|Alphabet]]
 
 
=Babu Jagjivan Ram, Meira Kumar, =
 
  
 +
 +
=Babu Jagjivan Ram, [[Meira Kumar]] =
 +
[[File: Babu Jagjivan Ram with Pandit Nehru.png|Babu Jagjivan Ram with Pandit Nehru|frame|left|500px]]
 +
[[File: mer.png||frame|500px]]
 
By Meira Kumar
 
By Meira Kumar
  
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'' India Harmony ''  VOLUME - 1 : ISSUE - 6 SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER, 2012
 
'' India Harmony ''  VOLUME - 1 : ISSUE - 6 SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER, 2012
  
[[File: Smt. Meira Kumar with President Barack Obama and Hon’ble Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh.png| Smt. Meira Kumar with President Barack Obama and Hon’ble Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh|frame|500px]]
 
  
 +
=1977: against Indira Gandhi=
 +
[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=In-77-he-dared-to-rebel-against-Indira-23062017016026  Jun 23 2017, In 1977, he dared to rebel against Indira, The Times of India]
 +
 +
Meira Kumar's father Jagjivan Ram was an influential political figure for almost four decades. A very bright student who overcame social discrimination, to which he was subjected because of being Dalit, Ram acquired the reputation of a good administrator and was at ease tackling the complexities of governance: a terrain which politicians often fail to negotiate.
 +
 +
Referred to as `Babuji' in his later years, he was the defence minister when India defeated Pakistan in 1971. His tenure as agriculture minister in the late 1960s saw fruition of the efforts to launch the Green Revolution, leading to food self-sufficiency.
 +
 +
The talented politician had caught the attention of leaders of the freedom struggle when he was a young labour leader working in Kolkata. He was among those who contributed to the All India Depressed Classes League: an outfit of Dalits and others who had suffered social discrimination.
 +
 +
Recognition came early and he was appointed the youngest member of Jawaharlal Nehru's interim cabinet. He remained a minister through the 1970s.
 +
 +
His rise was also facilitated by the Congress leadership's consideration to develop him as a counterweight to Dalit icon B R Ambedkar, whom it had fallen out with.Though Babuji suffered discrimination too, unlike Ambedkar, he did not turn into a rebel against Hinduism: perhaps because his father was deeply religious and, after quitting the Army , became a mahanth of the Shiv Narayani sect. In fact, there are references to Jagjivan `Babu' once attending a conference of Hindu Mahasabha.
 +
 +
He sided with Indira Gandhi when she split the party . In fact, he was made the head of the breakaway faction. Though no tional, the designation reflected his impor tance. However, his re lationship with the Nehru-Gandhi family turned bitter when Indira suspected him of harbouring the ambition of replacing her as PM after the Allahabad HC nullified her election to the Lok Sabha. He was consigned to the political doghouse during the Emergency.
 +
 +
Ram launched a rebellion when Indira announced elec tions in 1977. He and H N Bahuguna formed Congress for Democracy and joined forces with Janata Party to inflict a humiliating defeat on Indira.
 +
 +
He was among those in the running to be PM, and reportedly enjoyed the support of Jaiprakash Narayan. The candidature, however, could not find enough support among Janata Party MPs and Jagjivan Babu had to be content with being deputy PM.Janata Party projected him as its choice for PM in the 1980 polls but was routed.
 +
 +
He left Janata Party to float Congress (J), which turned out to be a spectacular failure. While he somehow scraped through in his Lok Sabha seat of Sasaram in 1984 under controversial circumstances, his party bombed at the hustings. He passed away in 1986.
  
 
= Babu Jagjivan Ram=
 
= Babu Jagjivan Ram=
Line 53: Line 73:
 
lamp of determination to fight a social
 
lamp of determination to fight a social
 
evil that millions like him had learned
 
evil that millions like him had learned
to bear over the centuries. Pandit
+
to bear over the centuries.  
 +
 
 +
Pandit
 
Madan Mohan Malviya, on a
 
Madan Mohan Malviya, on a
 
visit to his school was so
 
visit to his school was so
Line 75: Line 97:
 
on the issue of discrimination and
 
on the issue of discrimination and
 
came to the notice of Subhash
 
came to the notice of Subhash
Chandra Bose. His journey as a
+
Chandra Bose.  
 +
 
 +
His journey as a
 
freedom fighter, social activist and
 
freedom fighter, social activist and
 
political crusader had begun. The
 
political crusader had begun. The
Line 89: Line 113:
 
equality for
 
equality for
 
untouchables. The rest is
 
untouchables. The rest is
history. In 1985, Babuji
+
history.  
 +
 
 +
In 1985, Babuji
 
had the satisfaction of
 
had the satisfaction of
 
seeing his daughter
 
seeing his daughter
Line 109: Line 135:
 
water has flown under
 
water has flown under
 
the bridge since then.
 
the bridge since then.
Today, what makes Meira Kumar stand head and
 
shoulders over her two rivals in Parliament is her
 
broad world view – a vantage point from where
 
she can see the larger picture and perhaps
 
showcase to the world how beautifully India has
 
fought untouchability and given its daughters a
 
level playing field. The cosmopolitan,
 
multitalented Meira Kumar is the realization of
 
the dream of India's founding
 
fathers who enshrined social
 
equity in the Constitution of
 
India.
 
 
[[File: mer.png||frame|500px]]
 
 
= Meira Kumar=
 
Obama's journey as a statesman and as the
 
head of state is an inspiration for many
 
especially those who struggle for and aspire for a life of dignity”. With these words the
 
honourable speaker of the Lok Sabha, Smt. Meira
 
Kumar welcomed US President Mr. Barack
 
Obama to the Indian Parliament in November
 
2010. Her beautifully crafted speech made waves
 
around the world as it articulately expressed the
 
emotions of millions of marginalized people who
 
looked upon Obama's election as a culmination of
 
their aspirations for a just social order.
 
 
[[File: Meira Kumar with father Jagjivan Ram.png| Meira Kumar with father Jagjivan Ram|frame|500px]]
 
 
[[File: Babu Jagjivan Ram with Pandit Nehru.png|Babu Jagjivan Ram with Pandit Nehru|frame|left|500px]]
 
 
Meira Kumar's journey has been no less
 
inspirational. Born into the household of Babu
 
Jagjivan Ram,
 
she could not
 
but be
 
influenced by
 
the early
 
struggles of her
 
illustrious
 
father
 
 
Born in Patna in 1945, Meira
 
cut her political teeth as a
 
baby. Her father, had by then
 
become a representative of
 
Sasaram Constituency in
 
Bihar, a position he would
 
continue to hold for fifty years
 
– an unbroken record to this
 
day.
 
= Sasaram=
 
Sasaram, by itself, is no
 
ordinary district. It has been
 
the seat of power of legendry
 
rulers such as the Satyawadi
 
Raja Harishchandra in the
 
seventh century and the
 
phenomenal Sher Shah Suri in
 
the 15th century. Sasaram's
 
history straddles the Ramayan
 
period and the rule of Raja
 
Harishchandra, whose Rohtas
 
Fort was later rebuilt by Sher
 
Shah Suri and is an early example of India's
 
multiculturalism. The fort, during Sher Shah's
 
reign continued to house the Churasan and
 
Ganesh Temples alongside the Diwan – e – Aam
 
and Diwan-e-Khas. Surrounded by hillocks and
 
water falls it was an idyllic location for the seat of
 
the Kingdom. It was here that Sher Shah Suri was
 
born and built an empire from East Afghanistan to
 
Bengal. This visionary Afghan ruler, in his short
 
but eventful reign of five years was to leave a
 
legacy that connected Kabul to North India and on
 
to the East Coast through a paved road known as
 
the Grand Trunk Road. His administrative skills
 
and taxation laws were so exemplary that the
 
Moghul and British rulers adopted them too. He
 
lies buried in Sasaram, in a red sandstone
 
mausoleum in the middle of an artificial lake. This
 
grand monument built in the Indo-Afghan style
 
has Iranian influences in its blue and yellow
 
glazed tiles with some similarity to the Lodhi
 
tombs. Most significantly, it's massive free
 
standing dome also borrows from the Buddhist
 
Stupa style of the Mauryans. It is not unlikely that
 
Meira Kumar's early exposure to Sasaram's
 
glorious past was to shape her multidimensional,
 
multilingual personality in the years to come. She
 
is fluent in Hindi, Sanskrit, Urdu, Bhojpuri,
 
English and Spanish.
 
 
[[File: Sasaram Waterfall.png|Sasaram Waterfall|frame|500px]]
 
 
She is an accomplished markswoman, a poet in
 
both Sanskrit and Urdu and has associated herself
 
with conservation and heritage issues. No small
 
wonder that the constituency that gave her a
 
thumping victory in the last two Lok Sabha
 
elections has full faith in her ability to once more
 
put this landmark district on the national stage and
 
to take it's rightful place as a symbol of India's
 
ancient history. She, as most Biharis from
 
Sasaram District, are the natural heirs to the
 
legacy of Samrat Ashok whose pillar (one of the
 
thirteen Shilalekh) is housed in a small cave in
 
Kainur hill in Sasaram District.
 
 
[[File: Mausoleum of Sher Shah Suri.png|Mausoleum of Sher Shah Suri|frame|500px]]
 
  
[[File: Rohtas Fort at Sasaram.png|Rohtas Fort at Sasaram|frame|left|500px]]  
+
=See also=
 +
[[Babu Jagjivan Ram]]  
  
Having received her university education in Delhi,
+
[[Meira Kumar]]
Meira Kumar, a law graduate, went on to
+
represent India as a young diplomat later joining
+
politics at the request of Shri Rajiv Gandhi. Her
+
charm, serenity and affability saw her sail through
+
three elections from Karol Bagh, New Delhi and
+
two from Sasaram, Bihar. A daughter of Bihar
+
took on the mantle of not only her illustrious
+
father but her equally well known mother in law
+
Sumitra Devi, Bihar's first woman minister. Her
+
husband, Anshul Kumar is a well-known Supreme
+
Court lawyer who has always supported their
+
many public obligations as heirs of Bihar's most
+
distinguished freedom fighters and social
+
reformers. Her performance as India's first woman
+
speaker of the Lok Sabha has showcased her as a
+
global Indian – a role model for young Indian
+
women seeking to take their rightful place as
+
confident citizens of the world's largest
+
democracy. They stand poised to participate in
+
world affairs representing India's unmatched
+
ancient civilization, secure in their modernity in
+
the footsteps of their role model Shrimati Meira
+
Kumar.
+

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Contents

[edit] Babu Jagjivan Ram, Meira Kumar

Babu Jagjivan Ram with Pandit Nehru
Mer.png

By Meira Kumar

A many Splendoured Journey

India Harmony VOLUME - 1 : ISSUE - 6 SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER, 2012


[edit] 1977: against Indira Gandhi

Jun 23 2017, In 1977, he dared to rebel against Indira, The Times of India

Meira Kumar's father Jagjivan Ram was an influential political figure for almost four decades. A very bright student who overcame social discrimination, to which he was subjected because of being Dalit, Ram acquired the reputation of a good administrator and was at ease tackling the complexities of governance: a terrain which politicians often fail to negotiate.

Referred to as `Babuji' in his later years, he was the defence minister when India defeated Pakistan in 1971. His tenure as agriculture minister in the late 1960s saw fruition of the efforts to launch the Green Revolution, leading to food self-sufficiency.

The talented politician had caught the attention of leaders of the freedom struggle when he was a young labour leader working in Kolkata. He was among those who contributed to the All India Depressed Classes League: an outfit of Dalits and others who had suffered social discrimination.

Recognition came early and he was appointed the youngest member of Jawaharlal Nehru's interim cabinet. He remained a minister through the 1970s.

His rise was also facilitated by the Congress leadership's consideration to develop him as a counterweight to Dalit icon B R Ambedkar, whom it had fallen out with.Though Babuji suffered discrimination too, unlike Ambedkar, he did not turn into a rebel against Hinduism: perhaps because his father was deeply religious and, after quitting the Army , became a mahanth of the Shiv Narayani sect. In fact, there are references to Jagjivan `Babu' once attending a conference of Hindu Mahasabha.

He sided with Indira Gandhi when she split the party . In fact, he was made the head of the breakaway faction. Though no tional, the designation reflected his impor tance. However, his re lationship with the Nehru-Gandhi family turned bitter when Indira suspected him of harbouring the ambition of replacing her as PM after the Allahabad HC nullified her election to the Lok Sabha. He was consigned to the political doghouse during the Emergency.

Ram launched a rebellion when Indira announced elec tions in 1977. He and H N Bahuguna formed Congress for Democracy and joined forces with Janata Party to inflict a humiliating defeat on Indira.

He was among those in the running to be PM, and reportedly enjoyed the support of Jaiprakash Narayan. The candidature, however, could not find enough support among Janata Party MPs and Jagjivan Babu had to be content with being deputy PM.Janata Party projected him as its choice for PM in the 1980 polls but was routed.

He left Janata Party to float Congress (J), which turned out to be a spectacular failure. While he somehow scraped through in his Lok Sabha seat of Sasaram in 1984 under controversial circumstances, his party bombed at the hustings. He passed away in 1986.

[edit] Babu Jagjivan Ram

Babu Jagjivan Ram with his indomitable will and social reformist zeal so successfully carried forward the torch of the untouchability movement started by Gandhiji.

Babuji's childhood was not as privileged as his daughter's. Son of Sobhi Ram, a soldier in the British Army, he grew up in his native village of Chandwa, Bihar. His father died early after having quit his army job in an act of rebellion, leaving the family to a life of struggle. However, Babuji did not give up his education and in 1922 joined the english medium Arrah Town School. Unfazed by caste discrimination in his school, even being made to drink water from a pot marked “untouchables”, he doggedly continues his education. However, this incident became a turning point that lit in him the lamp of determination to fight a social evil that millions like him had learned to bear over the centuries.

Pandit Madan Mohan Malviya, on a visit to his school was so impressed by his passionate oratory that he invited him to join the Banaras Hindu University where he was awarded the Birla Scholarship. But his Dalit origins hounded him there too. He could not be served food in his hostel room as no attendant was ready to wash his dishes and no barber would give him a hair cut because he was an untouchable. In disgust, he left for Calcutta where he finally earned his B. Sc. Degree from Calcutta University. It was here that he organized conferences and rallies on the issue of discrimination and came to the notice of Subhash Chandra Bose.

His journey as a freedom fighter, social activist and political crusader had begun. The next sixty years were to see him rise from those early troubles to the post of Deputy Prime Minister of India, a national leader who was undisputedly the most charismatic, efficient and committed leader of the backward classes. He contributed to the establishment of the “All India Depressed Classes League” and dedicated himself to attaining equality for untouchables. The rest is history.

In 1985, Babuji had the satisfaction of seeing his daughter Meira Kumar take over the baton from him when she won her first election from Bijnor. It was not a cake walk. In the fray were two other young Dalit leaders, Ram Vilas Paswan and Mayawati. It was a close victory as her two rivals also scored a significant number of votes launching their careers as Dalit icons in the years to come. Much water has flown under the bridge since then.

[edit] See also

Babu Jagjivan Ram

Meira Kumar

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