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Jawaharlal Nehru
1889 - 1964

Jawaharlal Nehru was a great Indian nationalist leader who
worked for independence and social reform. He became first prime
minister of independent India, a position he retained until his
death. He initiated India's nonalignment policy in foreign
affairs.
Jawaharlal Nehru was born on Nov. 14, 1889, in Allahabad into a
proud, learned Kashmiri Brahmin family. His father, Motilal
Nehru, was a wealthy barrister and influential politician.
Jawaharlal was an only child until the age of 11, after which
two sisters were born. The atmosphere in the Nehru home was more
English than Indian; English was spoken. It was also a luxurious
home, with an impressive stable and two swimming pools.
Jawaharlal was educated at home by tutors, most of them English
or Scottish. Under the influence of a tutor Nehru joined the
Theosophical Society at 13.
At the age of 15 Nehru left for England, where he studied at
Harrow and Cambridge and then for the bar in London. He was
called to the bar in 1912. His English experience reinforced his
elegant and cosmopolitan tastes. As Nehru said of himself at
Cambridge, "In my likes and dislikes I was perhaps more an
Englishman than an Indian." In London he was attracted by Fabian
ideas; nationalism and socialism from this time on provided his
intellectual motive force.
Early Political Moves
Back in India, Nehru began to practice law with his father. It
was not until 1917 that Nehru was stirred by a political issue,
the imprisonment of Annie Besant, an Irish theosophist devoted
to Indian freedom. As a result, Nehru became active in the Home
Rule League. His involvement in the nationalist movement
gradually replaced his legal practice. In 1916 Nehru was married
to Kamala Kaul, of an orthodox Kashmiri Brahmin family. They had
one daughter (later Indira Gandhi, third prime minister of
independent India).
Apart from his father and Besant, the greatest influence on
Nehru politically was Mohandas Gandhi. Gandhi had been educated
much like Nehru but, unlike him, remained basically untouched,
essentially Indian. A second issue which fired Nehru's
nationalism and led him to join Gandhi was the Amritsar massacre
of 1919, in which some 400 Indians were shot on orders of a
British officer.
The year 1920 marked Nehru's first contact with the Indian kisan,
the peasant majority. Nehru was "filled with shame and sorrow …
at the degradation and overwhelming poverty of India." This
experience aroused a sympathy for the underdog which
characterized many of Nehru's later political moves. The plight
of the peasant was a challenge to his socialist convictions, and
he attempted to persuade the peasants to organize. From this
time on Nehru's concerns were Indian. He began to read the
Bhagavad Gita and practiced vegetarianism briefly. Most of his
life he practiced yoga daily.
In 1921 Nehru followed Gandhi in sympathy with the Khilafat
cause of the Moslems. Nehru was drawn into the first civil
disobedience campaign as general secretary of the United
Provinces Congress Committee. Nehru remarked, "I took to the
crowd, and the crowd took to me, and yet I never lost myself in
it." Nehru here articulated two of his most distinctive traits
throughout his career: his involvement with the people and his
aloof and lonely detachment. The year 1921 also witnessed the
first of Nehru's many imprisonments. In prison his political
philosophy matured, and he said that he learned patience and
adaptability. Imprisonment was also a criterion of political
success.
International Influences
In 1926-1927 Nehru took his wife to Europe for her health. This
experience became a turning point for Nehru. It was an
intellectual sojourn, highlighted by an antiimperialist
conference in Brussels. Here Nehru first encountered Communists,
Socialists, and radical nationalists from Asia and Africa. The
goals of independence and social reform became firmly linked in
Nehru's mind. Nehru spoke eloquently against imperialism and
became convinced of the need for a socialist structure of
society. He was impressed with the Soviet example during a visit
to Moscow.
Back in India Nehru was immediately engrossed in party
conferences and was elected president of the All-India Trades
Union Congress. In speeches he linked the goals of independence
and socialism. In 1928 he joined the radical opposition to
proposals for dominion status by his father and Gandhi. In 1930
Gandhi threw his weight to Nehru as Congress president,
attempting to divert radicalism from communism to the Congress.
In 1930 Nehru was arrested and imprisoned for violation of the
Salt Law, which Gandhi also protested in his famous "salt
march." Nehru's wife was also arrested. From the end of 1931 to
September 1935 Nehru was free only 6 months.
During the 1937 elections the Moslem League offered to cooperate
with the All-India Congress Committee in forming a coalition
government in the United Provinces. Nehru refused, and the
struggle between the Congress and the Moslem League was under
way. Nehru also established the precedent for economic planning
in a suggestion that the Congress form a national planning
committee. In 1938 Nehru paid a brief visit to Europe. On his
return he was sent briefly as envoy to China until war
intervened and made it necessary for him to return.
War in Europe drew India in, together with England. For Indian
leaders the question was how an honourable settlement could be
reached with England and still allow India to participate on the
Allied side. Negotiations toward this end culminated in the
Cripps mission and offer of dominion status in March 1942. Nehru
refused to accept dominion status, as did the rest of Congress
leadership. There followed the Congress "Quit India" resolution
and the imprisonment of Nehru, Gandhi, and other Congress
leaders until June 1945. There were nationwide protests, a mass
demand for independence.
Prime Minister
In 1945, as Congress president, Nehru was pressed into
negotiations with the Moslem League and the viceroy.
Congress-Moslem League negotiations were marked by communal
killings in Calcutta, followed by sympathetic outbreaks
throughout India. Final decisions were reached in conversations
between the last British viceroy, Lord Mountbatten, and Nehru,
Gandhi, and Mohammad Ali Jinnah. According to the Mountbatten
Plan, two separate dominions were created. Nehru became prime
minister and minister of external affairs of independent India
in 1947.
Following Gandhi's assassination in January 1948, Nehru felt
very much alone facing economic problems and the possibility of
the Balkanization of India. In 1949 he made his first visit to
the United States in search of a solution to India's pressing
food shortage.
Free India's first elections in 1951-1952 resulted in an
overwhelming Congress victory. Economic planning and welfare
were the first claims on Nehru's attention. He inaugurated a
diluted version of socialist planning: concentration of public
investment in areas of the economy that were free from private
interests. The Planning Commission was created in 1950 and
launched the First Five-Year Plan in 1951, stressing an increase
in agricultural output. Nehru also took pride in the Community
Development Program, established to raise the standard of living
in the villages. He saw the Third Five-Year Plan operative
before his death on May 27, 1964, in New Delhi.
Nehru was the architect of nonalignment in foreign policy.
Economic weakness and the Indian tradition were powerful factors
in formulating the policy. The other influence on Nehru's
foreign policy was his controversial minister of defense,
Krishna Menon. Nehru sought closer relations with nonaligned
Asian states, with India in the role of leader.
Nehru's nonalignment policy was criticized by many Westerners
and some Indians as giving preference to totalitarian countries
rather than to democracies. Some critics believed that
nonalignment left India no effective means to deal with China,
national defense, the Great Powers, or the underdeveloped
community. On the other hand, nonalignment had many Indian
defenders, even in the face of the Chinese invasion of Indian
border territory in 1962. Some held that nonalignment was a
strategy for deterrence and peace, a force for protecting Indian
independence and preservation of the international community on
ethical grounds. Nevertheless, nonalignment as implemented by
Nehru did not prevent the government from resorting to force in
Hyderabad, Kashmir, and Goa.
Nehru the man and politician made such a powerful imprint on
India that his death on May 27, 1964, left India with no
political heir to his leadership. Indians repeated Nehru's own
words of the time of Gandhi's assassination: "The light has gone
out of our lives and there is darkness everywhere."
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This web page was last updated on:
13 December, 2008
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