Jawaharlal Nehru : (14 November 1889 – 27 May 1964)
was the first Prime
Minister of India
and a central figure in Indian politics for much of the 20th century. He emerged
as the paramount leader of the Indian
Independence Movement
under the tutelage of Mahatma Gandhi and ruled India from its
establishment as an independent nation in 1947 until his death in office in
1964. Nehru is considered to be the architect of the modern Indian
nation-state; a sovereign, socialist, secular, and democratic
republic.
The son of Motilal Nehru, a prominent lawyer and nationalist
statesman, Nehru was a graduate of Trinity
College, Cambridge
and the Inner
Temple, where he
trained to be a barrister. Upon his return to India, he
enrolled at the Allahabad
High Court, and
took an interest in national politics, which eventually replaced his legal
practice. A committed nationalist since his teenage years, Nehru became a
rising figure in Indian politics during the upheavals of the 1910s. He became
the prominent leader of the left-wing factions of the Indian
National Congress
during the 1920s, and eventually of the entire Congress, with the tacit
approval of his mentor, Gandhi. As Congress
President in 1929,
Nehru called for complete
independence from
the British
Raj and instigated
the Congress's decisive shift towards the left.
Nehru and the Congress dominated
Indian politics during the 1930s as the country moved towards independence. His
idea of a secular nation-state was seemingly validated when the Congress, under
his leadership, swept the 1937
provincial elections
and formed the government in several provinces; on the other hand, the
separatist Muslim
League fared much
poorer. But these achievements were seriously compromised in the aftermath of the
Quit
India Movement in
1942, which saw the British effectively crush the Congress as a political
organisation. Nehru, who had reluctantly heeded Gandhi's call for immediate
independence, for he had desired to support the Allied war effort during the Second World War, came out of a lengthy prison term
to a much altered political landscape. The Muslim League under his old Congress
colleague and now bête noire, Muhammad
Ali Jinnah, had
come to dominate Muslim politics in India. Negotiations between Nehru and
Jinnah for power sharing failed and gave way to the independence and bloody partition
of India in 1947.
Nehru was elected by the Congress to
assume office as independent India's first Prime Minister, although the
question of leadership had been settled as far back as 1941, when Gandhi
acknowledged Nehru as his political heir and successor. As Prime Minister,
Nehru set out to realise his vision of India. The Constitution
of India was
enacted in 1950, after which he embarked on an ambitious program of economic,
social and political reforms. Chiefly, he oversaw India's transition from a
monarchy to a republic, while nurturing a plural, multi-party
democracy. In
foreign policy, Nehru took a leading role in Non-Alignment while projecting India as a
regional hegemon in South Asia.
Under Nehru's leadership, the Congress
emerged as a catch-all party, dominating national and state-level politics and
winning consecutive elections in 1951, 1957, and 1962. He remained popular with the
people of India in spite of political troubles in his final years and failure
of leadership during the 1962 Sino-Indian War.
Nehru rejected religion. He observed
the effects of superstition on the lives of the Indian people and wrote of religion that “…it
shuts its eyes to reality." Nehru thought that religion was at the root of
the stagnation and lack of progress in India. The basis of Indian society at
that time was unthinking obedience to the authority of sacred books, old
customs, and outdated habits Nehru observed that these attitudes and religious
taboos were preventing India from going forward and adapting to modern
conditions: “No country or people who are slaves to dogma and dogmatic
mentality can progress, and unhappily our country and people have become
extraordinarily dogmatic and little-minded.” Therefore, he concurred, that
religions and all that went with them must be severely limited before they
ruined the country and its people. He was deeply concerned that so many Indian
people could not read or write and wanted mass education to release Indian
society from the limitations that ignorance and religious traditions imposed.
The birth anniversary of Jawaharlal
Nehru is celebrated as Children’s Day.
SUNISH C
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