Jayaprakash Narayan was born on 11 October 1902 in Sitabdiara, Saran,
Bihar, India & died on 8 October 1979 in Patna, Bihar, India,
widely known as JP Narayan, Jayaprakash, or Loknayak, was an Indian
independence activist and political leader, remembered especially for
leading the opposition to Indira Gandhi in the 1970s and for giving a call for peaceful Total Revolution.
His biography, Jayaprakash, was written by his nationalist friend and an eminent
writer of Hindi literature, Ramavriksha Benipuri. In 1998, he was
posthumously awarded the Bharat Ratna, India’s highest civilian award,
in recognition of his social work. Other awards include the Magsaysay
award for Public Service in 1965. The airport of Patna is also named
after him.
Born in a Kayastha Family, when he was a child, he had many pets. One
day, his pigeon died and he did not eat food for two days afterward.
His father Harsudayal was a junior official in the canal department of the State
government and was often touring the region. Jayaprakash, called Baul
affectionately, was left with his grandmother to study in Sitabdiara.
There was no high school in the village, so Jayaprakash was sent to Patna to study in the Collegiate School. He excelled in school. His essay, “The present state of Hindi in Bihar”, won a best essay award. He entered the Patna College on a Government scholarship.Jayaprakash
Narayan joined “Bihar Vidyapeeth” founded by Dr. Rajendra Prasad for
motivating young meritorious youths and was among the first students of eminent Gandhian Dr. Anugrah Narayan Sinha , a close colleague of M. K. Gandhi who later became first Deputy Chief Minister of Bihar.
Though JP was practically a committed Marxist, he was convinced that
the communists in India must join the main stream of the struggle for
National Liberation even if it was under the hegemony of the so-called
bourgeoisie. On his way back to India, he had met Clemenus Dutt, brother
of Rajani Palme Dutt and other communist leaders in London and
discussed with them the issue of India’s freedom & revolution. JP,
who had read Lenin’s famous “Colonial thesis” calling upon the
communists in the “Slave” countries to take active part in the national
freedom struggle, was not convinced of Dutt’s argument. Later when JP
joined the nationalist freedom movement, he was surprised to find that
Indian communists were following the line which Clemenus Dutt advocated.
JP could not understand the rationality of the fight against the Indian
National Congress which was fighting for the freedom of the country.
After returning to India, Narayan joined the Indian National Congress
on the invitation of Jawaharlal Nehru in 1929; Mahatma Gandhi became
his mentor in the Congress. He
shared the same house at kadam kuan in Patna with his close friend and
nationalist Ganga Sharan Sinha (Shrivastava). with whom he shared the
most cordial and lasting friendship. 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.
After being jailed in 1932 for civil disobedience against British
rule, Narayan 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, or (CSP), a left-wing group within the Congress, was formed with Acharya Narendra Deva as President and Narayan 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.” He was also a great advocate
of corelation “SAHJEEVAN”
Initially a defender of physical force, Narayan 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.
After independence and the death of Mahatma Gandhi, Narayan, 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 the 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. His party is the first national party who distributed tickets on caste line. This was the point where Jayaprakash Narayan disagreed with the party principles and pursued Sarvodey and Lokniti.
On April 19, 1954, Narayan 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, Narayan formally broke with the Praja Socialist Party in
order to pursue lokniti, as opposed to rajniti. By this time, Narayan
had become convinced that lokniti should be non-partisan in order to
build a consensus-based, classless, participatory democracy which he termed Sarvodaya. Narayan became an important figure in the India-wide network of Gandhian Sarvodaya workers.
In 1964, Narayan was vilified across the political spectrum for
arguing in an article in the Hindustan Times that India had a
responsibility to keep its promise to allow self-determination to the state
of Jammu and Kashmir. He hit back at critics in a second article,
dismissing the Indian version of the “domino theory” which held that the
rest of India’s states would disintegrate if Kashmir were allowed its
promised freedom. In his graceful if old-fashioned style, Narayan
ridiculed the premise that “the states of India are held together by
force and not by the sentiment of a common nationality. It is an
assumption that makes a mockery of the Indian Nation and a tyrant of the
Indian State”.
Narayan returned to prominence in State politics in the late 1960s. In 1974, he led the student’s movement in the state
of Bihar which gradually developed into a popular people’s movement
known as the Bihar movement. It was during this movement that JP gave a
call for peaceful Total Revolution Together with V. M. Tarkunde, he
founded the Citizens for Democracy in 1974 and the People’s Union for Civil Liberties in 1976, both NGOs, to uphold and defend civil liberties.
When Indira Gandhi was found guilty of violating electoral laws by
the Allahabad High Court, Narayan called for Indira to resign, and
advocated a program of social transformation which he termed Sampoorna
kraanti. Instead she proclaimed a national Emergency on the midnight of
June 25, 1975, immediately after Narayan had called for the PM’s
resignation and had asked the military and the police to disregard
unconstitutional and immoral orders; JP, opposition leaders, and dissenting members of her own party (the ‘Young Turks’) were arrested on that day.
Jayaprakash Narayan attracted a gathering of 100,000 people at the
Ramlila Grounds and thunderously recited Rashtrakavi Ramdhari Singh
‘Dinkar”s wonderfully evocative poetry: Singhasan Khaali Karo Ke Janata
Aaati Hai.
Narayan was kept as detenu at Chandigarh even after he had asked for a
month’s parole for mobilising relief in areas of Bihar gravely affected
by flood. His health suddenly deteriorated on October 24, and he was
released on November 12; diagnosis at Jaslok Hospital, Bombay, revealed
kidney failure; he would be on dialysis for the rest of his life.
“Free JP” campaign was launched in UK by Surur Hoda and chaired by
Nobel Peace Prize winner Noel- Baker for the release of Jayaprakash
Narayan.
After Indira revoked the emergency on January 18, 1977 and announced
elections, it was under JP’s guidance that the Janata Party (a vehicle
for the broad spectrum of the anti-Indira Gandhi opposition) was formed.
The Janata Party was voted into power, and became the first
non-Congress party to form a government at the Centre. On the call of
Narayan many youngesters joined the J P movement.
Jayaprakash Narayan died on 8 October 1979 due to effects of diabetes
and heart ailments; but a few months before that, in March 1979, his
death was erroneously announced by the Indian prime minister to the
parliament as he lay fighting for his life in Jaslok Hospital, causing a
brief wave of national mourning, including the suspension of parliament
and regular radio broadcasting, and closure of schools and shops. When
he was told about the gaffe a few weeks later, he smiled.
The then Prime Minister of India Shri Charan Singh declared 07 days
mourning on the death of Jayaprakash Narayan calling him, ” the
conscience of the nation”
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