On Sardar Patel not
becoming
the first Prime Minister of
India ….
Socio-political
netspace, these days, is overflowing with Shri. Narendra Modi. He has almost
been the single biggest subject matter today. Some of his supporters even have
gone to the extent of projecting him as the 'New Sardar of Gujrat'. They
obviously are referring to Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel and see Modi as a
reincarnation of the old Sardar. One person has gone to the extent of saying
that Gujrat missed the chance of having the Prime Minister of India in
1946, largely owing to Gandhiji; now it should not lose this chance. Every
Gujarati must support the reincarnated Sardar of Gujrat to be the Prime
Minister of India. A couple of voices are seen talking about Morajee Desai. But
it appears like nobody takes him seriously when Prime Ministers of India are
counted. Personally I also agree with this view and hence am not counting it
seriously. In this context, I propose to view the reasons why Sardar was not
chosen as the Prime Minister.
One
site has described the sequence of events that took place at the time of
choosing the first prime minister of India . It has some impressions and
perceptions also. But overall, this is what the site has to say about the
events, sequentially.
How Sardar Patel did not become first PM of India ?
It
was a meeting in Delhi to decide new president
of Congress and Gandhiji said that whoever would be a new congress president
will take an oath as a first prime minister of India . Jawaharlal Nehru, Sardar
Patel and other Congress leader were present in this crucial meeting.
Gandhiji
declared in this meeting that out of 15, 12 regional Congress committees had
suggested Sardar patel’s name as a president (and thus as the first prime
minister of India) and only one had suggested Shri Krupalaniji’s name who took
his name back in favor of Jawaharlal Nehru. So Gandhiji said that now there
were two candidates Jawaharlal Nehru and Sardar Patel.
Gandhi
asked Jawaharlal ‘Jawahar none of the regional committees has suggested your name
and only working committee has suggested your name, what do you think?’
Jawaharlal Nehru wanted to become prime minister so he did not answer this
question and just kept looking at the floor. Gandhiji immediately understood
what Jawaharlal’s wish was. Gandhiji wrote a note on a paper and gave it to
Sardar Patel who was siting just next to him. Sardar read that note and
imidietly took his name back.
Thus Jawaharlal Nehru became first prime minister
of India
instead of deserving Shri Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel. This was major major
injustice to Gujarat and India .
Jawaharlal gave us Kashmir problem, China war, wrong socialist development
model and his daughter, daughter’s son, his wife and her children to rule India .
Prof. Makkhan Lal, Senior Fellow at
Vivekanand International Foundation in fact goes to saying that ‘Talking about the
death of party democracy and High Command culture has become far too common now
a days. There is an impression that this High Command culture began in the
Congress with Mrs. Indira Gandhi and since then it has spread in other parties
as well…….. Maulana Azad’s India Wins Freedom, K.M. Munishi’s Pilgrimage to Freedom, N. V. Gadgil’s Government From Inside, D.
P. Mishra’s Living an Era
(in three volumes) and above all Sardar
Patel’s Correspondence (Edited by
Durga Das in 12 Vols.) throw light on how the process of all powerful High
Command and the death of internal party democracy began in the Congress during
the pre-Independence days itself in the Congress. Three episodes – namely
choosing the First Prime Minister, Electing the First President of India and
Ousting the Elected President of the Congress (Purushottam Das Tandon) – throw
ample light on it.
Shri. Anurag Ranjan provides this
information. “(In
1946) Azad was also interested in fighting and winning election for the
Congress president’s post as he, too, had ambitions to become the
PM, but he was told in no uncertain terms by Mahatma Gandhi that he does
not approve of a second term for a sitting Congress president and Azad had to
fall in line ,albeit reluctantly. Not only this, Gandhi made it very clear to
everybody that Nehru was his preferred choice for the Congress president’s
position.” This piece is
corroborated by Vallabhbhai’s biographer Shri. Balaraj Krishna. According to
him, it was only on protracted insistence by Gandhiji that Azad stepped down as
Congress President. Azad himself wanted to be the Prime Minister of India. But
at the time of election, 12 out of 15 PCCs had suggested the name of
Vallabhbhai Patel. Nobody had suggested the name of Nehru for presidentship.
But Gandhiji, defying all norms of democracy, prevailed on Patel to withdraw
his name, in favour of Nehru. Shri. Krishna
wonders why Gandhiji did not support his most loyal lieutenant of three decades
though he confirms that socialist leaders like Jayprakash Narayan and muslim
leaders including Maulana Azad were against Patel.
Personal Secretary of Maulana Azad Humayun
Kabir, however, exonerates Mahatmaji of any interference. According to him,
Gandhiji was in favour of Patel only. But the outgoing president, Maulana Azad,
always felt Patel had a narrow vision. He, therefore, suggested Nehru’s name
when it became clear to him that its not going to be him. However, this claim
seems to have no takers. An overwhelming majority of analysts are sure on
Gandhiji’s open support of Jawaharlal Nehru. According to Prof. Makkhan Lal, Gandhiji had made his
choice known in the favour of Jawaharlal Nehru on 20thApril, 1946.
This was not the first time that Gandhiji spoke about his choice of Nehru; even
before the process of election was set in motion. He had been speaking about it
from the last several years. But Maulana’s desire for re-election and newspaper
reports about it upset Gandhiji and on 20.04.1946 he wrote to Maulana Azad, who
had already been President of Congress for the last six years: “Please go
through the enclosed cuttings.… I have not spoken to anyone of my opinion. When
one or two Working Committee members asked me, I said that it would not be
right for the same President to continue…. If you are of the same opinion, it
may be proper for you to issue a statement about the cuttings [the news item
Gandhiji had sent him] and say that you have no intention to become the
President again…. In today’s circumstances I would, if asked, prefer
Jawaharlal. I have many reasons for this. Why go into them?”
However, the reasons for this choice of
Gandhiji are not clear. The space of net and written material is buff with
speculations. Prof. Makkhan Lal states, only after Gandhiji was informed that “Jawaharlal
will not take the second place” he asked Patel to withdraw. Dr. Rajendra Prasad
lamented that Gandhiji “had once again sacrificed his trusted lieutenant for
the sake of the ‘glamorous Nehru’ and further feared that “Nehru would follow
the British ways.” That fear of
Nehru not being amenable to Gandhiji was the prime reason. On the other hand,
Anurag Ranjan provides at least two reasons. “We
can conclude that Gandhi chose Nehru over Patel because of two main reasons: 1.
Gandhi believed a foreign educated Nehru with modern thoughts had an edge over
Patel who, according to him, was orthodox in his thoughts. 2. Gandhi feared
Nehru would revolt in case he was denied PM’s post and that would give the
British an excuse to delay transfer of power. On the other hand, he was fully
convinced of Sardar Patel’s loyalty. He knew Sardar Patel was a true patriot
and would never play a spoilsport. It
must be accepted here that the decision to prefer Nehru over Patel has been
criticised by two known critics of Sardar Patel who took the decision to be
correct when it was taken but later realised the folly. Maulana Abul Kalam Azad
confessed in his autobiography that was published posthumously in 1959, “It was
a mistake on my part that I did not support Sardar Patel. We differed on many
issues but I am convinced that if he had succeeded me as Congress President he
would have seen that the Cabinet Mission Plan was successfully implemented.”
Similarly, C Rajgopalachary who blamed Sardar Patel for depriving him of
the first Presidentship of independent India, wrote, “Undoubtedly it
would have been better if Nehru had been asked to be the Foreign Minister and
Patel made Prime Minister. I too fell into the error of believing that
Jawaharlal was the more enlightened person of the two…” Admitting the honesty
of the two gentlemen, it seems possible that while the PCCs were overwhelmingly
in favour of Sardar Patel, the top Congress leadership was not so sure about
him, may be including M. K. Gandhi. It may be recalled here that Patel was the
only Congress leader to say openly that Jinah’s call would be taken heads on
and “swords will meet swords”, if Jinah insisted on his adamant ways. If
Maulana Azad, who was willing to accept anything and everything for keeping the
united India
intact, saw this as raw arrogance and aggression, it can be understood.
Rajmohan
Gandhi suggests that the primary reason for Gandhiji not to select Patel was the
age. Patel was 71 in 1946 as against Nehru, who was 56 only. “The main reason why
Gandhi could not name Patel Prime Minister was Patel was very ill, he was very
old. Patel belonged to Gandhi’s generation, Jawaharlal was leading to next
generation.” I, personally,
believe this could be the most important reason. For a nation getting
independence after centuries of old fashioned backward looking and apathetic
rule, the leadership, at least in the initial period, has to be consistent,
modern in outlook, compassionate and charming. Due to his age as well as
background, Patel had none of these while Nehru had all.
The issue, however, doesn’t stop there. Many
writers, based on their set of information, aired other possibilities. Broadly
they move along the border of being negative, anti-Congress and anti-Nehru and one-sided.
Prof. Makkhan Lal, as already seen above, suggests that Gandhiji was informed
that Nehru will not take second place. So Gandhiji had to offer him the post of
the PM. Anurag Ranjan suggests that Gandhi feared Nehru would revolt in case he
was denied PM’s post and that would give the British an excuse to delay
transfer of power. Some analysts go to the extent of saying ‘It is believed
that Nehru blackmailed Mahatma Gandhi by saying that he would dissolve Congress if he is not sworn in as the Prime
Minister. Another view supporting this
blackmail theory suggests that Nehru had threatened to split Congress. As an
observer standing over six decades away, it seems possible that Nehru may have
refused to play a second fiddle to Sardar Patel. That would have deprived the
newly liberated India
of his services. But it this does not look like the reason for Gandhiji
switching over his preference to favour Nehru. As has already been seen above,
even before the nominations for the post of Congress President were open,
Gandhiji had written to Maulana, supporting Nehru for the post. The theory of
blackmail sounds hollow on account of two more reasons. Gandhi was not used to
keep lying down even in cases of open defeats. Like in case of Netaji Subhash
becoming Congress President, much to the embarrassment of Gandhi, in all
likelihood, he would have fought the betrayer whosoever it be. On the other
hand, Nehru’s name was not brought up by any PCC. As Shri. Balraj Krishna often
asserts, Patel had a steely grip on the Congress Party. Many times he pushed
his agenda even though almost no other senior leader favoured him. That being
the case, how Nehru could have split Congress, standing against the
Patel-Gandhi duo is hard to fathom today. Officially, Nehru was not even the then President of Congress. Maulana Azad was the outgoing President while the incoming was being decided. In the circumstances, the talk of
blackmail and Bapu succumbing to a firm and adamant Nehru sounds untrue. It
seems most likely that Gandhiji was always in favour of Jawaharlal, owing to
the modern outlook and charm of the latter. Some times, I even feel that the
polished personality, poetic nature and the romantic fabian that Nehru was,
made Gandhi believe that it could help India attain a respectable position
in the international fraternity in the shortest possible time. I can’t see
Patel, as Prime Minister of India, taking up ventures like Non-Aligned Movement
(NAM). He would have, in all probabilities, confined himself to India and, at best, South
East Asia .
Some of the reactions suggest that there is
a large scale impression across the board that had Sardar been the PM, Kashmir issue has been solved then and there only. The
mess, in which India
finds itself today, would not have arisen at all. Similar is the impression on
issues with China .
One of the posts (not by a Gujrati) says ‘History has proved it beyond doubt
that had Patel been the PM in place of Nehru, the country wouldn’t have faced humiliation
of 1962 war. Days before his
death, Patel had written to Nehru warning him about China ’s nefarious designs but Nehru
didn’t pay any attention to that letter. Even Kashmir would not have become a
thorn in the flesh for India ,
had Patel and not Nehru been the first prime minister of India .’ How
Sardar would have handled Kashmir and China ? What can we say on this
impression?
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