Dear Friends,
Today we remember two extremely
inspiring personalities who left an important mark in India’s history
before and after Independence. We pay tributes to Maulana Abul Kalam Azad and Acharya JB Kripalani on their 125th birth anniversary. Born in the same year, both these men dedicated a lifetime in service of the nation.
Maulana Abul Kalam Azad needs no
introduction. It was as if he was blessed with a revolutionary streak
from a young age. In 1912 he started the paper Al-Hilal, which did not
hesitate from attacking the colonial rulers. He occupied an important
place in the Congress party under Mahatma Gandhi’s guidance, including
as the President during the critical years of early and mid 1940s. He
served as India’s first Education Minister and it was under his tenure
that the first IIT was inaugurated in Kharagpur. Maulana Azad will also
be remembered for his steadfast opposition to partition of India.
A man of deep principles and a
commitment to serve the poorest of the poor, Acharya Kripalani embraced
Mahatma Gandhi’s leadership during the Champaran Satyagraha and he too
went on to occupy an important role in the organisation of the Congress.
After Independence he left the Congress and went on to form the Kisan
Mazdoor Praja Party, which later merged with the Socialist Party to form
the Praja Socialist Party.
Acharya Kripalani created history when
he moved the first ever no-confidence motion against the Government of
Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru in 1963. The motion came in the backdrop of
India’s humiliating defeat to China, which was attributed to the
misplaced idealism and lack of preparedness on the part of our first
Prime Minister and then Defence Minister Shri VK Krishna Menon. Infact,
Acharya Kripalani was unsparingly critical of Krishna Menon on repeated
occasions on the floor of the Lok Sabha. His spirited contest against
Krishna Menon from North Bombay in 1962 as the joint candidate of all
Opposition parties barring the Communists is still remembered. He became
one of the staunchest critics of the Emergency as well. Acharya Kripalani became very closely associated with Gujarat Vidyapeeth, which was established by Gandhi ji.
Much has been made of our efforts to
commemorate various historical figures, who have either been completely
ignored or have not been adequately remembered in the history
books.After reading this blog, youare again likely to see television
studios and social media networks rife with comments like ‘What does Modi have in common with them’ or ‘But they were not in Modi’s party’ among other things.
Friends, this is exactly the mindset we need to change.
It is with deep anguish that I see how
some of our friends have reduced stalwarts of the freedom struggle to
mere partisan political leaders.There can be no greater
disservice to our history than viewing these stalwarts through the
narrow prism of political partisanship.
It is high time we realize that these
are leaders who transcended barriers of caste, community, creed or party
lines. Their ideals and legacy are not for any party but for the entire
nation to get inspired.
What is equally worrying is tendency of
“speculative history” where some celebrity historians have appropriated
to themselves the authority to speculate what some historical figure
would have said or done.
Take the case of the relations between
Maulana Abul Kalam Azad and Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel. Yes, it is a fact
that both Maulana Azad and Sardar Patel differed on many issues. But, it
is equally a fact that both were guided by their absolute love and
devotion for India and both of them worked together on several occasions
under the guidance of Mahatma Gandhi. After all, debate, discussion and disagreements are a part and parcel of a vibrant democracy.
Our ancient texts believed that learning is a continuous process.
Knowledge and understanding must evolve with time and must not remain
frozen in the polemics of the past.
It is in this light that I want to share
Maulana Azad’s thoughts on Sardar Patel, which were published in his
work ‘India Wins Freedom.’ Maulana Azad describes not running again for
Congress President as his first mistake. As for his second mistake he
wrote:
“My second mistake was that when I
decided not to stand myself, I did not support Sardar Patel. We differed
on many issues but I am convinced thathe would have seen that the
Cabinet Mission Plan was successfully implemented. He would have never
committed the mistake of Jawaharlal which gave Mr. Jinnah an opportunity
of sabotaging the Plan. I can never forgive myself when I think that if
I had not committed these mistakes, perhaps the history of the last ten
years would have been different.”
It is equally true that there
are historical figures who have been erased from public memory just
because they did not belong to a particular family. The history
of India is the history or the struggle of countless men and women who
devoted a lifetime to the clarion call of the Motherland.
Just because they did not belong to a particular family should we erase them from public memory or remember them less?
An online portal on Maulana Azad will be
launched today by the Centre containing his digital archives. This is a
welcome thing but one must also ask why they only paid lip service to
his legacy all these decades? Should things like this not have come much
earlier?
I will end by paying my richest tributes
to Maulana Abul Kalam Azad and Acharya Kripalani with a prayer that we
can create the India they and several other stalwarts of the freedom
struggle dreamt of.
NarendraModi
For more: http://www.narendramodi.in/cm-blogs-on-birth-anniversary-of-maulana-abul-kalam-azad-and-acharya-jb-kripalani/
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