Babu Jagjivan Ram was born on 5 April 1908 in Chandwa, Bhojpur District,
Bihar, British Raj & died on 6 July 1986, known popularly as
Babuji, was a freedom fighter and a social reformer hailing from the
scheduled castes of Bihar in India. He was from the Chamar caste
and was a leader for his community. He was instrumental in foundation
of the ‘All-India Depressed Classes League’, an organization dedicated to attaining equality for untouchables, in 1935 and was elected to Bihar Legislative Assembly in 1937, that is when he organized, rural labour movement.
In 1946, he became the youngest minister in Jawaharlal Nehru’s provisional
government, the First Union Cabinet of India as a Labour minister, and
also a member of Constituent Assembly of India, where he ensured that
social justice was enshrined in the Constitution. He went on serve as a
minister in the Indian parliament with various portfolios for more than forty years as a member of Indian National Congress (INC), most importantly he was the Defence Minister of
India during the Indo-Pak war of 1971, which resulted in formation of
Bangladesh. His contribution to the Green Revolution in India and
modernising Indian agriculture, during his two tenures as Union
Agriculture Minister are still remembered, especial during 1974 drought
when he was asked to hold the additional
portfolio to tide over the food crisis. Though he supported Indira
Gandhi during the Emergency in India (1975–1977), he left Congress in
1977 and joined Janata Party alliance in 1977, along with his Congress
for Democracy, he later served as the Deputy Prime Minister of
India (1977–1979), then in 1980, he formed Congress (J). He is also
famous for “forgetting to pay his taxes” during his years in power.
Jagjivan Ram was born in a family of five siblings, elder brother
Sant Lal, and three sisters. His father Sobhi Ram was with British
Indian Army, posted at Peshawar, but later resigned due to some differences
and bought some farming land in his native village Chandwa, and settled
there. He also became a Mahant of Shiv Narayani sect, skilled in
calligraphy he illustrated many book of the sect and distributed
locally.
Young Jagjivan started going a local school in January 1914, but
shortly afterward his father died prematurely, leaving him and his
mother Vasanti Devi to economic hardships. He joined Aggrawal Middle
School in Arrah in 1920, where the medium of instruction was English for
the first time, and joined Arrah Town School in 1922, it was here that
is faced caste discrimination for the first time, yet remained unfazed.
An often cited incident occurred in the school, there was this tradition
of having two water pots in the school, one for Hindus and another for
Muslims, so when Jagjivan drank water from the Hindu pot, while being
from an untouchable class, the matter was reported to the Principal, who
placed a third pot for “untouchables” in the school, but this pot was
broken by him twice, eventually the Principal decided against placing
the third pot. A turning point in his life came in 1925, when Pt. Madan
Mohan Malviya visited his school, and impressed by his welcome address,
invited him to join Banaras Hindu University.
Jagjivan Ram passed his matriculation in the first division and
joined the Banaras Hindu University (BHU) in 1927, where he was awarded
the Birla scholarship, and passed his Inter Science Examination; while
at BHU he organised the scheduled castes to protest against social
discrimination. As a Dalit student, he would not be served meals in his
hostel, denied haircut by local barbers, a Dalit barber would arrive
from Ghazipur from occasionally to trim his hair, eventually he left BHU
and pursued graduation from Calcutta University. In 2007, the BHU set up a Babu Jagjivan Ram Chair in its faculty of social sciences to study caste discrimination and economic backwardness.
He received a B.Sc. degree from the University of Calcutta in 1931,
here again he organized conferences to draw the attention towards issues
of discrimination, and also participated in the anti-untouchability
movement started by Mahatma Gandhi.
Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose took notice of him at Kolkata, when in
1928 he organized a Mazdoor Rally at Wellington Square, in which
approximately 50,000 people participated. When the devastating Bihar
earthquake of 1934 occurred he got actively involved in the relief work
and his efforts were appreciated his work. When popular rule was
introduced under the 1935 Act and the scheduled castes were given
representation in the legislatures, both the nationalists and the
British loyalists sought him because of his first-hand knowledge of the
social and economic situation in Bihar, Jagjivan Ram was nominated to
the Bihar Council. He chose to go with the nationalists and joined
Congress, which wanted him not only because he was valued as an able
spokesperson for the depressed classes, but also that he could counter
Ambedkar; he was elected to the Bihar assembly in 1937. However, he
resigned his membership on the issue of irrigation cess.
In 1935, he contributed to the establishment of the ‘All-India Depressed Classes League’, an organization dedicated to
attaining equality for untouchables. He was also drawn into the Indian
National Congress, in the same year he proposed a resolution in the 1935
session of the Hindu Mahasabha demanding that temples and drinking
water wells be opened up to Dalits. and in the early 1940s was
imprisoned twice for his active participation in the Satyagraha and the
Quit India Movements. He was among the principal leaders who publicly
denounced India’s participation in the World War II between the European
nations and for which he was imprisoned in 1940.
In 1946 he became the youngest minister in Jawaharlal Nehru’s provisional
government and also the subsequent First Indian Cabinet, as a Labour
Minister, where he is credited for laying the foundation for several
labour welfare policies in India. He was a part of the prestigious high
profile Indian delegation that attended to attend the International
Labour Organization (ILO)’s International Labour Conference on 16 August
1947 in Geneva along with the great Gandhian Bihar Bibhuti Dr. Anugrah
Narayan Sinha his chief political mentor and also the then head of the
delegation, and few days later he was elected President of the ILO. He
served as Labour minister until 1952, later he several Ministerial posts
in Nehru’s Cabinet,Communications (1952–56), for Transport and railways
(1956–62), and for Transport and communications (1962–63).
In Indira Gandhi’s government he worked as minister for Labour,
employment, and rehabilitation (1966–67), and Union minister for Food
and agriculture (1967–70), where he is best remembered for having
successfully led the Green Revolution during his tenure. When the
Congress Party split in 1969, Jagjivan Ram joined the camp led by Indira
Gandhi, and became the president of that faction of Congress. He worked
as the Minister of Defence (1970–74) making him the virtual No. 2 in
the cabinet, minister for Agriculture and irrigation (1974–77). It was
during his tenure as the minister of Defence that the Indo-Pakistani War
of 1971 was fought, and Bangladesh achieved independence. While loyal
to Prime Minister Indira Gandhi for most of the Indian Emergency, in
1977 he along with five other politicians resigned from the Cabinet and
formed the Congress for Democracy party, within the Janata coalition.
A few days before the elections, on a Sunday, Jagjivan Ram addressed
an Opposition rally at the famous Ram Lila Grounds in Delhi. The
national broadcaster Doordarshan allegedly attempted to stop crowds from
participating in the demonstration by telecasting the blockbuster movie
Bobby. The rally still drew large crowds, and a newspaper headline the
next day ran “Babu beats Bobby”. He was the Deputy Prime Minister of
India when Morarji Desai was the Prime Minister, from 1977 to 1979,
though initially reluctant to join the cabinet, and was not present at
the oath-taking ceremony on 27 March 1977; he eventually did so at the
behest of Jai Prakash Narayan, who insisted that his presence for
necessary, “not just as an individual but as a political and social
force” and took oath later on. However, he was once again given the
defence portfolio. Disillusioned with the Janata party he formed his own
party, the Congress (J). He remained a member of Parliament till his
death in 1986, after over forty years as a parliamentarian. He was
elected from Sasaram parliament constituency in Bihar. His uninterrupted
representation in the Parliament from 1936 to 1986 was a world record,
until Tony Benn overtook him by serving 51 years (1950–2001) in the
British parliament.
He holds the record for being longest serving cabinet minister in
India for 30 years. (Ref. Kendriya Mantripraishad 1947-2004 ,published
by Loksabha Secretriate) Union Minister of Labour, 1946-1952. Union
Minister for Communications, 1952-1956. Union Minister for Transport and
Railways, 1956-1962. Union Minister for Transport and Communications,
1962-1963. Union Minister for Labour, Employment and Rehabilitation,
1966-1967. Union Minister for Food and Agriculture, 1967-1970. Union
Minister of Defence, 1970–1974, 1977-1979. Union Minister of Agriculture
and Irrigation, 1974-1977. Founding Member, Congress for Democracy
party (aligned with Janata Party), 1977. Deputy Prime Minister of India,
March 23, 1977-August 22, 1979. Founder, Congress (J). He served as
President of the Bharat Scouts and Guides from September 1976 to April
1983.
In August 1933 his first wife died after a brief illness, thereafter
in June 1935 he married Indrani Devi, a daughter of Dr. Birbal, a
well-known social worker of Kanpur, and the couple had two children,
Suresh Kumar and Meira Kumar.
His son Suresh’s sex acts with a 21 year-old Sushma Chaudhary were
published in the magazine run by Maneka Gandhi and this resulted in the
decline of Jagjivan Ram’s political career.
The place he was cremated has been turned into the memorial Samatha
Sthal, and his birth anniversary is observed as Samatha Diwas, (Equality
Day) in India, his centenary celebrations were held all over the nation
in 2008, especially at his statues at the Parliament and at Nizam
College; demands for awarding him posthumous Bharat Ratna have being
raised from time to time Hyderabad. Andhra University which had
conferred an honorary doctorate on him in 1973, and in 2009 on the
occasion of his 102nd birth anniversary, his statue was unveiled on the
university premises.
His daughter, Meira Kumar, is a prominent INC leader, who has won his
former seat Sasaram, both 2004 and 2009 and was later the Minister for
Social Justice in the Manmohan Singh government (2004 – ’09), thereafter
she became the Speaker of Lok Sabha in 2009. To propagate his
ideologies, the ‘Babu Jagjivan Ram National Foundation’, has been set up
by Ministry of Social Justice, Govt. of India in Delhi.
The first indigenously built electric locomotive to have been built
in India, a WAM-1 model, was named after him, which was recently
restored by the Eastern Railway.
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