Chakravarti Rajagopalachari popularly known as Rajaji or C.R. was an
independence activist, ardent patriot, eminent statesman, astute politician,
incisive thinker, pioneering social reformer, profound scholar, able
administrator, lawyer and author. He personified the ideal of simple living and
high thinking. He was the only Indian Governor General of independent India.
Rajaji was a proponent of world peace and disarmament. A master of Sanskrit and
Tamil literatures, he was a keen student of Hindu philosophy. He was a pious
Hindu and was deeply religious. In the words of Jawaharlal Nehru, "Rajaji
represents fundamentally the highest type of mind in India." Richard Casey,
Governor of Bengal regarded Rajaji as the wisest man in India. Gandhiji
described him as the "keeper of my conscience". He was one of the first
recipients of Bharat Ratna, India’s highest civilian award.
Considered as Gandhiji's heir, Rajaji was regarded as one of the top five
leaders of the Indian National Congress along with Jawaharlal Nehru, Rajendra
Prasad, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel and Maulana Abul Kalam Azad. Of the five,
Rajaji, Nehru and Patel were christened the "head, heart and hands" of Gandhiji,
in whose shadows they remained till his death.
Rajaji commenced his legal
practice in Salem in 1900. He became a member of the Salem Municipality in 1911
and was elected as Chairman in 1917. During his two-year tenure, he was
responsible for the election of the first Dalit member of the Salem
Municipality.
After Mahatma Gandhi joined the Indian independence movement
in 1919, Rajaji became one of his followers. He participated in the agitations
against the Rowlatt Act, Non-Cooperation movement, the Vaikom Satyagraha and the
Civil Disobedience Movement. During this time, he gave up his law practice. In
1921, he was elected to the Congress Working Committee and served as the General
Secretary. Rajaji was a staunch advocate of prohibition and was elected
Secretary of the Prohibition League of India in 1930.
Rajaji emerged as one of the leaders of the Tamil Nadu Congress in the
early 1930s. In response to the Dandi March, Rajaji led the Vedaranyam Salt
Satyagraha in 1937 and was imprisoned. Subsequently, he was elected as the
President of the Tamil Nadu Congress Committee. Following enactment of the
Government of India Act in 1935, Rajaji was instrumental in getting the Indian
National Congress to participate in the 1937 general elections. He was elected
Premier of the Madras Presidency and served till 1940. At the outbreak of the
World War II, Rajaji resigned as Premier in protest against Britain's
declaration of war on Germany. However, he later advocated dialogue with
Britain's war efforts and opposed the Quit India Movement. He also advocated
dialogue with the Muslim League which was demanding the partition of India.
Rajaji served as the Minister for Industry, Supply, Education and Finance
in the Interim Government headed by Jawaharlal Nehru. When India attained
independence on August 15, 1947, the British province of Bengal was divided into
two, with West Bengal becoming part of India and East Bengal part of Pakistan.
Rajaji was appointed first Governor of West Bengal and his priorities were to
deal with refugees and to bring peace and stability.
In the absence of Lord Mountbatten, Rajaji served as Acting Governor
General of India from November 10, 1947 till November 24, 1947. He led a simple
life in the Viceregal Palace, washing his own clothes and polishing his own
shoes! Later, he served as Governor General of India from June 1948 until
January 26, 1950. He joined the Union Cabinet as Minister without Porfolio in
1950 at the invitation of Jawaharlal Nehru. After the death of Sardar
Vallabhbhai Patel, Rajaji was made the Home Affairs Minister on December 15,
1950. By the end of 1951, the differences between Nehru and Rajaji surfaced and
Rajaji submitted his resignation on the "grounds of ill-health" and returned to
Madras.
From 1952 to 1954, Rajaji served as Chief Minister of Madras State. During
his tenure, Rajaji issued the Temple Entry Authorization and Indemnity Act 1939,
under which restrictions were removed on Dalits entering Hindu temples. His
tenure as Chief Minister of Madras is largely remembered for the compulsory
introduction of Hindi in educational institutions. At the same time, he called
for Tamil to be introduced as the medium of instruction in schools. However, he
was accused of being pro-Sanskrit and pro-Hindi, despite his vehement protests
against the imposition of Hindi. He also introduced Prohibition in the state.
Attributing poor health, Rajaji resigned as Chief Minister on April 13, 1954 and
took a temporary break from active politics.
On June 4, 1959, Rajaji, along with Murari Vaidya and Minoo Masani,
announced the formation of the Swatantra Party representing coalition of
interests opposed to the Congress. The Party was fundamentally conservative and
anti-Communist, supporting free enterprise and the reduction of the Central
government’s control of the states. He sharply criticised the bureaucracy and
coined the term "License-Permit Raj". The Party stood against the Congress in
the 1962, 1967 and 1972 elections.
Rajaji was an accomplished writer who made lasting contributions to Indian
literature. He wrote a Tamil re-telling of the Sanskrit epic Ramayana which
appeared as a serial in the Tamil magazine Kalki. The episodes were collected
and published later as Chakravarthi Thirumagan, a book which won Rajaji the 1958
Sahitya Academy award in Tamil language. In 1922, he published Siraiyil Tavam
(Meditation in jail), an account of his first imprisonment by the British. In
1951, he wrote an abridged retelling of the Mahabharata in English. He had also
translated Kambar's Tamil Ramayana into English. In 1965, he translated the
Thirukkural into English and wrote books on the Bhagavad Gita and the Upanishads
in English as well as works on Socrates and Marcus Aurelius in Tamil. He is also
credited with composition of the song Kurai Onrum Illai devoted to Lord Krishna,
set to Carnatic music. He composed a benediction hymn sung by M.S. Subbulakshmi
at the UN General Assembly in 1967.
Rajaji was also one of the founders of the Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, an
organisation dedicated to the promotion of education and Indian culture. In 1959
the Bhavan published his book: "Hinduism: Doctrine and Way of Life". He was also
the founder of the Salem Literary Society and the Tamil Scientific Terms Society
in 1916.
Rajaji was born into a devout Iyengar family of Thorapalli in the Salem
district of Tamil Nadu on December 10, 1878. His father was Chakravarti
Venkatarya Iyengar and mother Singaramma. As a young child, he was admitted to a
village school in Thorapalli, and then at the age of five moved with his family
to Hosur where Rajaji enrolled at the Hosur Government School. He passed his
matriculation examinations in 1891 and graduated in arts from Central College,
Bangalore in 1894. He also studied law at the Presidency College, Madras from
where he graduated in 1897. Rajaji married Alamelu Mangamma in 1897 and the
couple had two sons and two daughters.
During his lifetime, Rajaji also acquired the nickname ‘Mango of Salem’.
Referring to Rajaji, Sarojini Naidu remarked that 'the Madras fox was a dry
logical Adi Shankaracharya while Nehru was the noble, compassionate Buddha’.
Rajaji died on December 25, 1972 at the age of 94.
(Author is Freelance Journalist and social activist. He can be contacted on
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