|
Kayastha Dignitaries |
| |
|
Swami
Vivekananda |
|
A spiritual genius
of commanding
intellect and power,
Vivekananda crammed
immense labor and
achievement into his
short life,
1863-1902. Born in
the Datta family of
Calcutta, the
youthful Vivekananda
embraced the
agnostic
philosophies of the
Western mind along
with the worship of
science.

At the same time,
vehement in his
desire to know the
truth about God, he
questioned people of
holy reputation,
asking them if they
had seen God. He
found such a person
in Sri Ramakrishna,
who became his
master, allayed his
doubts, gave him God
vision, and
transformed him into
sage and prophet
with authority to
teach.
After Sri
Ramakrishna's death,
Vivekananda
renounced the world
and criss-crossed
India as a wandering
monk. His mounting
compassion for
India's people drove
him to seek their
material help from
the West. Accepting
an opportunity to
represent Hinduism
at Chicago's
Parliament of
Religions in 1893,
Vivekananda won
instant celebrity in
America and a ready
forum for his
spiritual teaching.
For three years he
spread the Vedanta
philosophy and
religion in America
and England and then
returned to India to
found the
Ramakrishna Math and
Mission. Exhorting
his nation to
spiritual greatness,
he wakened India to
a new national
consciousness. He
died July 4, 1902,
after a second, much
shorter sojourn in
the West. His
lectures and
writings have been
gathered into nine
volumes.
|
|
|
Dr. Rajendra Prasad |
|
Dr. Rajendra Prasad,
son of Mahadev Sahai,
was born in Zeradei
village in Bihar on
December 3, 1884.
Being the youngest
in a large joint
family "Rajen" was
greatly loved and
was strongly
attached to his
mother and elder
brother Mahendra.
Zeradei's population
was cosmopolitan in
nature and the
people lived
together in
happiness and
harmony. Rajendra
Prasad's earliest
memories are playing
"kabaddi" with his
Hindu and Muslim
friends. Rajen was
married when he was
barely 12 years old
to Rajvanshi Devi.
_babu.jpg)
Rajen was a
brilliant student
throughout school
and college. He
stood first in the
entrance examination
of the University of
Calcutta and was
awarded a Rs. 30 per
month scholarship.
It was first time
that a student from
Bihar had excelled.
He joined the
Calcutta Presidency
College in 1902.
The partition of
Bengal in 1905
fueled the swadeshi
and boycott
movements. The
movements had a deep
effect on students
in Calcutta. One
day, residents of
his hostel created a
bonfire of all the
foreign clothings
they had. When Rajen
went through his
belongings he could
not find a single
item of foreign
clothing.
Gopal Krishna
Gokhale had started
the Servants of
India Society in
1905 and asked Rajen
to join. So strong
was his sense of
duty toward his
family and education
that he, after much
deliberation,
refused Gokhale, one
of the greatest
nationalists of the
time. Rajen
recalled, "I was
miserable" and for
the first time in
his life he barely
got through his B.L.
examinations.
In 1915, Rajen
passed the Masters
in Law examination
with honors, winning
a gold medal. He
then completed his
Doctorate in Law to
attain the title,
Dr. Rajendra Prasad |
|
Shri Lal Bahadur
Shastri |
Lal Bahadur
Shastri
(October 2,
1904 -
January 11,
1966) was
the second
permanent
Prime
Minister of
independent
India and a
significantfigure
in the
struggle
forindependence.
Early
Life and
Freedom
Struggle
Shashtriji
was born in
Mughalsarai
(also spelt
as
Moghalsarai),
in United
Province
(now Uttar
Pradesh). To
take part in
the
non-cooperation
movement of
Mahatma
Gandhi in
1921, he
began
studying at
the
nationalist,
Kashi
Vidyapeeth
in Kashi,
and upon
completion,
he was given
the title
Shastri,
or
Scholar,
Doctor
at Kashi
Vidyapeeth
in 1926. He
spent almost
nine years
in jail in
total,
mostly after
the start of
the
Satyagraha
movement in
1940, he was
imprisoned
until 1946
[citation
needed].
|
Political
Career
Following
India's
independence,
he was Home
Minister
under Chief
Minister
Govind
Ballabh Pant
of Uttar
Pradesh. In
1951, he was
appointed
General
Secretary of
the Lok
Sabha before
re-gaining a
ministerial
post as
Railways
Minister. He
resigned as
Minister
following a
rail
disaster
near
Ariyalur,
Tamil Nadu.
He returned
to the
Cabinet
following
the General
Elections,
first as
Minister for
Transport,
in 1961, he
became Home
Minister.
Rise to
Premiership
Jawaharlal
Nehru died
in office on
May 27, 1964
and left a
vacuum. The
major
figures of
the Congress
Party were
unable to
find enough
support
which
allowed the
lesser
regarded
Shastri to
come through
as the
compromise
candidate,
becoming
Prime
Minister on
June 9.
Shastri,
though
mild-mannered
and
soft-spoken,
was a
Nehruvian
socialist
and thus
held appeal
to those
wishing to
prevent the
ascent of
conservative
right-winger
Morarji
Desai.
Shastri
worked by
his natural
characteristics
to obtain
compromises
between
opposing
viewpoints,
but in his
short tenure
was
ineffectual
in dealing
with the
economic
crisis and
food
shortage in
the nation.
However, he
commanded a
great deal
of respect
in the
Indian
populace,
and he used
it to
advantage in
pushing the
Green
Revolution
in India;
which
directly led
to India
becoming a
food-surplus
nation,
although he
did not live
to see it.
His
administration
began on a
rocky turf.
War with
Pakistan
See Also:
Indo-Pakistani
War of 196
The
chief
problem was
Pakistan.
Laying claim
to half of
the Kutchch
peninsula,
Pakistan
sent
incursion
forces in
August 1965,
who
skirmished
with Indian
tanks. Under
a scheme
proposed by
the British
PM, Pakistan
obtained 10%
of their
original
claim of
50%. But
Pakistan's
main
aggressive
intentions
were upon
Kashmir.
Just in
September
1965, major
incursions
of militants
and
Pakistani
soldiers
began,
hoping not
only to
break-down
the
government
but incite a
sympathetic
revolt. The
revolt did
not happen,
and an angry
India sent
its forces
across the
Line of
Control, and
the war
broke out on
a general
scale.
Massive tank
battles
occurred in
the Punjab,
and while
Pakistani
forces made
some gains,
Indian
forces
captured the
key post at
Haji Pir, in
Kashmir, and
brought the
Pakistani
city of
Lahore under
artillery
and mortar
fire.
Tashkent
A
ceasefire
was
declared,
and the
soft-spoken,
mild-mannered
Shastri,
once butt of
jokes was
now a
national
hero. In
January 1966
Shastri and
Pakistani
President
Muhammad
Ayub Khan
attended a
summit in
Tashkent
(former
USSR, now in
modern
Uzbekistan),
organised by
Kosygin.
Shastri
signed a
treaty with
Pakistan on
January 10,
the Tashkent
Declaration,
but the next
day he was
dead of a
heart
attack. He
is the only
Indian Prime
Minister to
have died in
office
overseas,
and indeed
probably one
of the few
heads of
government
in history
to do so.
All his
lifetime, he
was known
for his
honesty and
humility.
Memorial
He was
the first
person to be
posthumously
awarded the
Bharat Ratna
and a
memorial
"Vijay Ghat"
was built
for him in
Delhi. The
slogan
Jai Jawan,
Jai Kisan
(Hindi for
"Hail the
soldier,
Hail the
farmer") is
attributed
to Shastri.
Quotes
Jai
Jawan, Jai
Kisan:
Hail the
soldier,
Hail the
farmer
(Hindi)
If
one person
gives up one
meal in a
day, some
other person
gets his
only meal of
the day.:
made during
the food
crisis to
encourage
people to
evenly
distribute
food. |
|
Netaji
Subhash
Chandra Bose |
Subhash
Chandra
Bose
(January
23,
1897–August
18,
1945)
also
known
as
Netaji,
was
a
prominent
leader
of
the
Indian
independence
movement
against
British
colonial
rule.
Bose
helped
to
organize
and
later
led
the
Indian
National
Army,
put
together
with
Indian
prisoners-of-war
and
plantation
workers
from
Singapore
and
other
parts
of
Southeast
Asia.
"Give
me
blood
and
I
shall
Give
you
freedom"
was
one
of
the
most
popular
statements
made
by
him,
whereby
he
urges
the
people
of
India
to
join
him
in
his
freedom
movement.
|
|
Early
life:
Subhash
Chandra
Bose
was
born
to
an
affluent
Bengali
family
in
Cuttack,
Orissa.
His
father,
Janakinath
Bose,
was
a
public
prosecutor
who
believed
in
orthodox
nationalism
and
later
became
a
member
of
the
Bengal
Legislative
Council.
With
eight
brothers
and
six
sisters,
Bose's
family
was
large,
but
disciplined.
He
loved
to
read
and
was
fascinated
with
religion,
discipline,
and
self-control.
As a
youth,
he
did
social
service
and
after
reading
Vivekananda's
writings,
"selfless
service"
became
the
motto
guiding
his
life.
Recognizing
his
son's
intellect,
Bose's
father
was
determined
that
Bose
should
become
a
high-ranking
civil
servant.
He
attended
the
Protestant
European
School
and
the
Ravenshaw
Collegiate
School
in
Cuttack
and
later
graduated
with
honours
from
the
Scottish
Church
College,
Calcutta.
He
was
placed
second
in
his
university
examinations
and
participated
as a
member
of
the
India
Defence
Corps,
then
a
newly-formed
military
training
unit
at
the
University
of
Calcutta.
Afterwards
he
travelled
to
England
and
attended
Fitzwilliam
Hall
at
the
University
of
Cambridge.
In
1920,
Bose
took
the
Indian
Civil
Service
entrance
examination
and
was
ranked
second.
However,
he
resigned
from
the
prestigious
Indian
Civil
Service
in
April
1921
despite
his
high
ranking
in
the
merit
list,
and
went
ahead
to
join
the
freedom
movement.
After
returning
to
India,
he
joined
the
Congress
party
and
was
particularly
active
in
its
youth
wing.
Bose's
ideas
did
not
match
with
that
of
Gandhi's
belief
in
non-violence.
So
he
returned
to
Kolkata
to
work
under
Chittaranjan
Das,
the
Bengali
freedom
fighter
and
co-founder
(with
Motilal
Nehru)
of
the
Swarajya
(Self
Rule)
Party.
In
1921,
Bose
organised
a
boycott
of
the
celebrations
to
mark
the
Prince
of
Wales'
visit
to
India.
This
led
to
his
being
imprisoned.
In
April
1924,
Bose
was
elected
the
Chief
Executive
Officer
of
the
newly
constituted
Calcutta
Corporation.
Later,
in
October
that
year,
Bose
was
arrested
as a
suspected
terrorist.
First,
he
was
in
Alipore
jail
and
later
he
was
exiled
to
Mandalay
in
Burma.
In
June
1925,
Bose
was
deeply
struck
by
the
sudden
loss
of
his
mentor
Chittaranjan
Das.
At
the
end
of
1926
he
was
nominated
in
absentia,
as a
candidate
for
the
Bengal
Legislative
Assembly.
On
May
16
1927
he
was
released
from
jail
due
to
ill-health.
The
two
years
in
Mandalay
increased
his
confidence
and
strength.
By
December
1927,
Bose
with
Jawaharlal
Nehru
became
the
the
General
Secretary
of
the
Congress.
On
January
23
1930,
Bose
was
once
again
arrested
for
leading
an
"Independence"
procession.
After
being
released
from
jail
on
September
25,
he
was
elected
as
the
Mayor
of
the
City
of
Calcutta.
He
was
incarcerated
eleven
times
by
the
British
over
a
span
of
twenty
years,
either
in
India
or
in
Rangoon.
He
spent
many
years
in
various
capacities
as
the
Chief
Executive
Officer
of
the
Calcutta
Municipal
Corporation
(where
Chittaranjan
Das
had
previously
been
Mayor),
and
later
as
Mayor
himself.
With
Jawaharlal
Nehru
he
was
one
of
the
radical
Left
wing
leaders
of
the
Congress
Party.
He
was
exiled
from
India,
during
the
mid
1930s
to
Europe,
where
he
stated
India's
cause
for
self-rule
before
gatherings
and
conferences
(like
the
Second
Communist
International).
After
his
father's
death
the
British
authorities
allowed
him
to
land
at
Calcutta's
airport
only
for
the
religious
rites,
which
would
be
followed
by
his
swift
departure.
During
this
time
he
traveled
extensively
in
India
and
in
Europe
before
stating
his
political
opposition
to
Gandhi.
He
became
the
president
of
the
Haripura
Indian
National
Congress
in
1938,
against
Gandhi's
wishes.
He
was
elected
for
a
second
term
in
1939
in
Tripura
Congress
Session;
Gandhi
had
supported
Pattabhi
Sitaramayya
and
commented
"Pattavi's
defeat
is
my
defeat"
after
learning
the
election
results.
Although
Bose
won
the
election,
Gandhi's
continued
opposition
led
to
the
resignation
of
the
Working
Committee.
In
the
face
of
this
gesture
of
no-confidence
Bose
himself
resigned.
Bose
then
formed
an
independent
party,
the
All
India
Forward
Bloc.
Actions
during
the
Second
World
War
:
Bose
advocated
the
approach
that
the
political
instability
at
war-time
Britain
should
be
taken
advantage
of—rather
than
simply
wait
for
the
British
to
grant
political
"Home
Rule"
after
the
end
of
the
war
(which
was
the
view
of
Gandhi,
Nehru
and
a
section
of
the
Congress
leadership)
at
the
time.
In
this
he
was
influenced
by
the
examples
of
Italian
statesmen
Giuseppe
Garibaldi
and
Giuseppe
Mazzini.
During
his
stay
in
Europe
from
1933
to
1936,
he
met
several
European
leaders
and
thinkers,
including
Benito
Mussolini,
Eduard
Benes,
Karl
Seitz,
Eamon
De
Valera,
Romain
Rolland,
and
Alfred
Rosenberg.
He
came
to
believe
that
India
could
achieve
political
freedom
only
if
it
had
political,
military
and
diplomatic
support
from
outside
and
that
an
independent
nation
necessitated
the
creation
of a
national
army.
His
correspondence
reveals
that
despite
his
sheer
dislike
for
British
subjugation,
he
was
deeply
impressed
by
their
methodical
and
systematic
approach
and
their
steadfastedly
disciplinarian
outlook
towards
life.
In
England,
he
exchanged
ideas
with
British
Labour
Party
leaders
and
political
thinkers
on
the
future
of
India.
He
came
to
accept
the
view
that
a
free
India
needed
Socialist
authoritarianism,
on
the
lines
of
Turkey's
Kemal
Ataturk
for
at
least
two
decades.
In
Germany
:
At
the
start
of
World
War
II,
Bose
escaped
his
incarceration
at
Home
by
taking
the
guise
of a
Pathan
insurance
agent
("Ziaudddin")
to
Afghanistan
and
from
there
to
Moscow
with
the
passport
of
an
Italian
nobleman
"Count
Orlando
Mazzotta".
From
Moscow
he
reached
Rome
and
from
there
he
traveled
to
Germany
where
he
instituted
the
Special
Bureau
for
India
under
Adam
von
Trott
zu
Solz,
broadcasting
on
the
German-sponsored
Azad
Hind
Radio.
He
founded
the
Free
India
Centre
in
Berlin
and
created
the
Indian
Legion
(consisting
of
some
4500
soldiers)
out
of
Indian
prisoners
of
war
who
had
previously
fought
for
the
British
in
North
Africa,
but
had
capitulated
to
Erwin
Rommel's
Afrika
Korps.
The
Azad
Hind
Legion
was
attached
to
the
Waffen
SS,
and
they
swore
their
allegiance
to
Hitler
and
Bose
for
the
independence
of
India.
Bose
was
deeply
dissapointed
with
Hitler
when
the
Germans
invaded
the
Soviet
Union
and
decided
to
leave
Nazi
Germany.
Besides,
Hitler
had
shown
little
interest
for
the
cause
of
Indian
independence.
He
travelled
by
submarine
around
the
Cape
of
Good
Hope
to
Imperial
Japan,
which
helped
him
to
raise
his
army
in
Singapore.
This
was
the
only
civilian-transfer
across
two
different
submarines
of
two
different
navies
in
World
War
II.
In
Japan
:
The
Indian
National
Army
(INA)
consisted
of
some
85,000
regular
troops,
a
separate
women's
army
unit
named
after
Rani
Lakshmi
Bai
(in
a
regular
army,
the
women's
army
unit
was
the
First
of
its
kind
in
Asia),
who
gave
her
life
in
the
First
War
of
Independence
in
1857.
These
were
under
the
aegis
of a
provisional
government,
with
its
own
currency,
court
and
civil
code,
named
the
"Provisional
Government
of
Free
India"
(or
the
Arzi
Hukumate
Azad
Hind)
and
recognised
by
nine
Axis
states:
Germany,
Japan,
Italy,
Croatia,
Nationalist
China,
Siam,
Burma,
Manchukuo
and
the
Philippines.
This
government
had
participated
as a
delegate
or
observer
in
the
so-called
Greater
East
Asia
Co-Prosperity
Sphere.
En
route
to
India,
some
of
Bose's
troops
assisted
in
the
Japanese
victory
over
the
British
in
the
battles
of
Arakan
and
Meiktila,
along
with
the
Burmese
National
Army
led
by
Ba
Maw
and
Aung
San.
The
Provisional
Government
and
the
INA
were
established
in
the
Andaman
and
Nicobar
Islands
in
the
Bay
of
Bengal,
part
of
the
British
Indian
Empire.
On
Indian
mainland,
the
Indian
Tricolor
was
raised
for
the
First
time
in
the
town
in
Moirang,
in
Manipur,
in
northeastern
India.
The
other
towns
of
Kohima
and
Imphal,
were
placed
under
siege
by
divisions
of
the
Japanese,
the
Burmese
and
the
Gandhi
and
Nehru
Brigades
of
I.N.A..
At
the
time
of
the
Great
Bengal
Famine
of
1943,
during
which
millions
died
of
starvation,
Bose
had
offered
(through
radio)
Burmese
rice
to
the
victims
of
the
famine.
The
British
authorities
in
India
(and
in
the
UK)
refused
the
offer.
When
the
Japanese
were
defeated
at
the
battles
of
Kohima
and
Imphal,
the
Provisional
Government's
aim
of
establishing
a
base
in
mainland
India
was
lost
forever
and
the
INA
was
forced
to
pull-back
along
with
the
defeated
Japanese
Imperial
Army.
Japan's
surrender
after
the
atomic
bombing
of
Hiroshima
and
Nagasaki
also
led
to
the
eventual
surrender
of
the
Indian
National
Army.
Political
views
:
Even
though
Bose
and
Gandhi
had
differing
ideologies,
the
latter
called
Bose
the
"Patriot
of
Patriots"
(Bose
had
called
Gandhi
"Father
of
the
Nation").
He
has
been
given
belated
recognition
in
India,
and
especially
in
West
Bengal;
Calcutta's
civil
airport
and
a
university
have
been
named
after
him.
Many
of
the
symbols
of
the
Bose's
provisional
government,
which
were
also
associated
with
the
Congress,
have
been
adopted
in
independent
India:
Rabindranath
Tagore's
"Jana
Gana
Mana",
which
was
the
national
song
of
the
Provisional
Government
of
Azad
Hind
is
independent
India's
National
Anthem,
and
the
tricolour
as
India's
national
flag.
His
alliance
with
the
Axis
continues
to
be
controversial;
many
in
India
consider
him
a
hero
for
his
forceful
stance
against
oppressive
British
imperialism.
In
Working
with
the
Japanese
he
was
however
fighting
his
own
countrymen,
who
defended
India
within
the
unpoliticised
volunteer
British
Indian
Army
against
the
Japanese
invasion.
At
the
time
of
the
start
of
the
Second
World
War,
Great
divisions
existed
in
the
Indian
independence
movement
about
whether
to
exploit
the
weakness
of
the
British
to
achieve
independence.
Some
felt
that
any
distinctions
between
the
political
allegiances
and
ideologies
of
the
warring
factions
of
Europe
were
inconsequential
in
the
face
of
the
possibility
of
Indian
independence,
and
that
it
was
hypocritical
of
the
British
to
condemn
pro-democracy
Indians
for
allying
themselves
with
anti-democratic
Axis
forces
when
the
British
themselves
showed
so
little
respect
for
democracy
or
democratic
reforms
in
India.
Others
felt
that
it
was
inappropriate
to
seek
concessions
when
Britain
itself
was
in
peril,
and
found
their
distaste
for
Nazi
Germany
outweighed
their
concerns
about
Independence.
Bose,
in
particular,
was
accused
of
collaborating
with
the
Axis;
he
counter-attacked
the
allegation
criticising
the
British
campaign
during
World
War-II,
saying
that
while
Britain
was
fighting
for
the
freedom
of
the
European
nations
under
Nazi
control,
it
did
not
grant
its
own
colonies,
including
India
their
rightful
independence.
It
may
be
observed
that
along
with
Nehru,
Bose
had
organized
and
led
protest
marches
against
the
Japanese
invasion
of
Manchuria
in
1931,
and
of
China
itself
in
1938,
when
he
was
Congress
president.
During
that
period,
Chinese
leader
Chiang
Kai
Shek
was
feted
in
India
and
medical
aid
and
food
supplies
were
sent
to
Chinese
areas
which
suffered
the
worst
brunt
of
Japanese
imperialism.
That
he
eventually
abandoned
his
political
stance
(which
initially
was
that
of
Gandhi
and
Nehru)
reflects
his
deep
discontent
with
the
nature
of
the
British
rule,
and
a
growing
belief
that
the
formation
of
an
Indian
free
state
was
nowhere
on
the
British
political
roadmap.
At
the
Tripura
Congress
session,
he
made
his
views
quite
explicit:
Britain
had
forced
a
war
on
India,
without
bothering
to
consult
Indians.
It
is
interesting
to
note
that
Bose's
earlier
correspondences
(prior
to
1939)
reflect
his
deep
disapproval
of
the
racist
practices
of
and
annulment
of
democratic
institutions
in
Nazi
Germany.
Though
Bose
did
ally
himself
with
the
Axis
powers,
there
is
little
to
suggest
he
shared
any
of
their
doctrines
of
racial
superiority;
instead
it
appears
he
was
motivated
to
join
them
largely
out
of
political
pragmatism.
Re-evaluation
of
Netaji
:
The
INA
is
fondly
remembered
by
some
Japanese
and
Indian
historians
who
see
Japanese
efforts
to
support
Bose
as
supporting
the
view
that
it
was
fighting
a
war
on
behalf
of
the
oppressed
peoples
of
Asia,
in
addition,
the
INA
is
seen
by
some
as
an
organisation
devoid
of
the
divisive
energies
of
parochialism
that
have
since
plagued
India.
Gandhi
called
Bose
the
"Patriot
of
Patriots"
(Bose
had
called
Gandhi
"Father
of
the
Nation").
Bose's
portrait
is
also
hung
in
the
Indian
Parliament
and
a
statue
has
been
erected
in
front
of
the
West
Bengal
Legislative
Assembly.
Bose
was
posthumously
awarded
the
Bharat
Ratna,
India's
highest
civilian
award
in
1992,
but
it
was
later
withdrawn
in
response
to a
Supreme
Court
of
India
directive
following
a
Public
Interest
Litigation
filed
in
the
Court
against
the
"posthumous"
nature
of
the
award.
The
Award
Committee
could
not
Give
conclusive
evidence
of
Bose's
death
and
thus
it
invalidated
the
"posthumous"
award.
Death
:
Bose
is
supposed
to
have
died
in a
plane
crash
over
Taiwan
while
flying
to
Tokyo.
However,
his
body
was
never
recovered,
and
conspiracy
theories
concerning
his
possible
survival
abound.
One
such
claims
that
Bose
actually
died
in
Siberia,
while
in
Soviet
captivity.
Mr.
Harin
Shah,
an
Indian
journalist,
visited
Taipei
and
was
shown
a
plane
crash
site
(supposedly
of
Bose's
plane).
Photos
can
be
found
at
http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/specials/Netaji/photogallerycrash.htm
However,
the
Taiwan
Government
told
an
Indian
journalist
investigating
into
Bose's
death
that
Bose
could
not
have
died
in a
plane
crash
in
the
country,
stating
that
there
"were
no
plane
crashes
at
Taipei
between
14
August
and
20
September
1945."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4236189.stm
|
|
Jay
Prakash
Narayan |
|
Jayaprakash
Narayan
(Devanāgarī:
जयप्रकाश
नारायण;
October
11,
1902
-
October
8,
1979),
widely
known
as
JP,
was
an
Indian
freedom
fighter
and
political
leader,
remembered
especially
for
leading
the
opposition
to
Indira
Gandhi
in
the
1970s
Early
life
He
was
born
in
Sitabdiara
village
in
Saran
district
of
Bihar,
and
studied
for
his
BA
and
MA
degrees
in
politics
and
sociology
in
the
United
States.
In
1922,
he
went
to
the
United
States,
where
he
studied
political
science
,
sociology
and
economics
at
the
universities
of
Berkeley,
Iowa,
Wisconsin
and
Ohio
State
[1][2].
He
adopted
Marxism
while
studying
at
the
University
of
Wisconsin
in
Madison,
Wisconsin
under
Edward
A.
Ross;
he
was
also
deeply
influenced
by
the
writings
of
M.
N.
Roy.
Financial
constraints
and
his
mother's
health
forced
him
to
abandon
his
wish
of
earning
a
PhD.
He
met
other
revolutionaries
like
Rajni
Palme
Dutt
in
London
on
his
way
back
to
India.
After
returning
to
India,
JP
joined
the
Indian
National
Congress
on
the
invitation
of
Jawaharlal
Nehru
in
1929;
M.
K.
Gandhi
would
be
his
mentor
in
the
Congress.
During
the
Indian
independence
movement,
he
was
arrested,
jailed,
and
tortured
several
times
by
the
British.
He
won
particular
fame
during
the
Quit
India
movement.
JP
married
Prabhavati
Devi,
a
freedom
fighter
in
her
own
right
and
a
staunch
disciple
of
Kasturba
Gandhi
in
October
1920;
she
stayed
in
Sabarmati
ashram
while
JP
was
abroad
and
became
a
devoted
Gandhian;
she
often
held
opinions
which
were
not
in
agreement
with
JP's
views,
but
JP
respected
her
independence.
She
was
the
older
daughter
of
Brajkishore
Prasad,
one
of
the
first
Gandhians
in
Bihar
and
one
who
played
a
major
role
in
Gandhi's
campaign
in
Champaran.
After
being
jailed
in
1932
for
civil
disobedience
against
British
rule,
he
was
imprisoned
in
Nasik
Jail,
where
he
met
Ram
Manohar
Lohia,
Minoo
Masani,
Achyut
Patwardhan,
Ashok
Mehta,
Yusuf
Desai
and
other
national
leaders.
After
his
release,
the
Congress
Socialist
Party,
a
left-wing
group
within
the
Congress,
was
formed
with
Acharya
Narendra
Deva
as
President
and
JP
as
General
secretary.
During
the
Quit
India
movement
of
1942,
when
senior
Congress
leaders
were
arrested
in
the
early
stages,
JP,
Lohia
and
Basawon
Singh
(Sinha)
were
at
the
forefront
of
the
agitations.
Leaders
such
as
Jayaprakash
Narayan
and
Aruna
Asaf
Ali
were
described
as
"the
political
children
of
Gandhi
but
recent
students
of
Karl
Marx."
After
independence
and
the
death
of
Mahatma
Gandhi;
JP,
Acharya
Narendra
Dev
and
Basawon
Singh
(Sinha)
led
the
CSP
out
of
Congress
to
become
the
opposition
Socialist
Party,
which
later
took
the
name
Praja
Socialist
Party.Basawon
Singh
(Sinha)
became
the
first
leader
of
opposition
in
the
state
and
assembly
of
Bihar
and
Acharya
Narendra
Deva
became
the
first
leader
of
opposition
in
the
state
and
assembly
of
U.P.
Initially
a
defender
of
physical
force,
JP
was
won
over
to
Gandhi's
position
on
nonviolence
and
advocated
the
use
of
satyagrahas
to
achieve
the
ideals
of
democratic
socialism.
Furthermore,
he
became
deeply
disillusioned
with
the
practical
experience
of
socialism
in
Nehru's
India.
Sarvodaya
On
19
April
1954,
JP
announced
in
Gaya
that
he
was
dedicating
his
life
(Jeevandan)
to
Vinoba
Bhave's
Sarvodaya
movement
and
its
Bhoodan
campaign,
which
promoted
distributing
land
to
Harijans
(untouchables).
He
gave
up
his
land,
set
up
an
ashram
in
Hazaribagh,
and
worked
towards
uplifting
the
village.
In
1957,
JP
formally
broke
with
the
Praja
Socialist
Party
in
order
to
pursue
lokniti
[Polity
of
the
people],
as
opposed
to
rajniti
[Polity
of
the
state].
By
this
time,
JP
had
become
convinced
that
lokniti
should
be
non-partisan
in
order
to
build
a
consensus-based,
classless,
participatory
democracy
which
he
termed
Sarvodaya.
JP
became
an
important
figure
in
the
India-wide
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