Biography, Social Work,
Political Activities –
Indira Priyadarshini
Gandhi (19 November 1917 — 31 October 1984) was an Indian
politician and stateswoman who served as the prime minister of India from 1966
to 1977 and again from 1980 until her assassination in 1984. She was India's
first and, to date, only female prime minister, and a central figure in Indian
politics as the leader of the Indian National Congress (INC). She was the
daughter of Jawaharlal Nehru, the first prime minister of India, and the mother
of Rajiv Gandhi, who succeeded her as prime minister. Gandhi's cumulative
tenure of 15 years and 350 days makes her the second- longest-serving Indian
prime minister after her father. Henry Kissinger described her as an "Iron
Lady", a nickname that became associated with her tough personality.
During her father
Jawaharlal Nehru's premiership from 1947 to 1964, Gandhi was his hostess and
accompanied him on his numerous foreign trips. In 1959, she played a part in
the dissolution of the communist-led Kerala state government as then-president
of the Indian National Congress, otherwise a ceremonial position to which she
was elected earlier that year. Lal Bahadur Shastri, who had succeeded Nehru as
prime minister upon his death in 1964, appointed her minister of information
and broadcasting in his government; the same year she was elected to the Rajya
Sabha, the upper house of the Indian Parliament. After Shastri's sudden death
in January 1966, Gandhi defeated her rival, Morarji Desai, in the INC's
parliamentary leadership election to become leader and also succeeded Shastri
as prime minister. She was the world's second female prime minister after
Sirimavo Bandaranaike when she became Prime Minister of India. She led the
Congress to victory in two subsequent elections, starting with the 1967 general
election, in which she was first elected to the lower house of the Indian
parliament, the Lok Sabha. In 1971, her party secured its first landslide
victory since her father's sweep in 1962, focusing on issues such as poverty.
But following the nationwide state of emergency she implemented, she faced
massive anti-incumbency sentiment causing the INC to lose the 1977 election,
the first time in the history of India to happen so. She even lost her own
parliamentary constituency. However, due to her portrayal as a strong leader
and the weak governance of the Janata Party, her party won the next election by
a landslide and she returned to the premiership.
As prime minister, Gandhi
was known for her uncompromising political stances and centralization of power
within the executive branch. In 1967, she headed a military conflict with China
in which India repelled Chinese incursions into the Himalayas. In 1971, she
went to war with Pakistan in support of the independence movement and war of
independence in East Pakistan, which resulted in an Indian victory and the
independence of Bangladesh, as well as increasing India's influence to the
point where it became the sole regional power In South Asia. Another military
operation against Pakistan, codenamed Operation Meghdoot, occurred during her
tenure in 1984, which led to India expanding the territory it effectively
controlled in the disputed Kashmir region.
Gandhi also played a
crucial role in initiating India's first successful nuclear weapon test in
1974. Her rule saw India grow closer to the Soviet Union by signing a
friendship treaty in 1971 to ward off perceived geopolitical threat as a result
of the U.S. warming up to China. India received military, financial, and diplomatic
support from the Soviet Union during its conflict with Pakistan in the same
year. Though India was at the forefront of the Non-Aligned Movement, Gandhi
made it one of the Soviet Union's closest allies in Asia, each often supporting
the other in proxy wars and at the United Nations.
Responding to separatist
tendencies and a call for revolution, she instituted a state of emergency from
1975 to 1977, during which she ruled by decree and basic civil liberties were
suspended. More than 100,000 political opponents, journalists and dissenters
were imprisoned. She faced the growing Sikh separatism movement throughout her
fourth premiership; in response, she ordered Operation Blue Star, which
involved military action in the Golden Temple and killed hundreds of Sikhs. On
31 October 1984, she was assassinated by two of her bodyguards, both of whom
were Sikh nationalists seeking retribution for the events at the temple.
Gandhi is remembered as
the most powerful woman in the world during her tenure. Her supporters cite her
leadership during victories over geopolitical rivals China and Pakistan, the
Green Revolution, a growing economy in the early 1980s, and her anti-poverty
campaign that led her to be known as "Mother Indira" (a pun on Mother
India) among the country's poor and rural classes. Critics note her cult of
personality and authoritarian rule of India during the Emergency. In 1999, she
was named "Woman of the Millennium" in an online poll organized by
the BBC. In 2020, she was named by Time magazine among the 100 women who
defined the past century as counterparts to the magazine's previous choices for
Man of the Year.
Early life and career –
Indira Gandhi was born
Indira Nehru, into a Kashmiri Pandit family on 19 November 1917 in Allahabad
(present-day Prayagraj) in Uttar Pradesh. Her father, Jawaharlal Nehru, was a
leading figure in the Indian movement for independence from British rule, and
became the first Prime Minister of the Dominion (and later Republic) of India. Indira
was her parents' only surviving child (she had a younger brother who died while
young); she grew up with her mother, Kamala Nehru, at the Anand Bhavan, a large
family estate in Allahabad. In 1930, the Nehru family donated the mansion to
the Indian National Congress and renamed it Swaraj Bhavan (meaning abode of
freedom). A new mansion was built nearby to serve as the family residence and
given the name of the old Anand Bhavan. Indira had a lonely and unhappy childhood.
Her father was often away, directing political activities or incarcerated,
while her mother was frequently bedridden with illness and later suffered an
early death from tuberculosis. Indira had limited contact with her father,
mostly through letters.
Indira Nehru was taught
mostly at home by tutors and attended school intermittently until matriculation
in 1934. She was a student at the Modern School in Delhi, St. Cecilia's and St.
Mary's Convent schools in Allahabad, the International School of Geneva in
Geneva, the Ecole Nouvelle in Bex in Vaud, Switzerland, and the Pupils' Own
School in Poona in Maharashtra and in Bombay, which is affiliated with the
University of Mumbai. She and her mother moved to the Belur Math headquarters
of the Ramakrishna Mission where Swami Ranganathananda was her guardian. Indira
then studied at the Vishwa Bharati in Santiniketan, which became Visva-Bharati
University in 1951. During an interview with Rabindranath Tagore, he named
Indira Priyadarshini, which means "looking at everything with
kindness" in Sanskrit and she became known as Indira Priyadarshini Nehru.
A year later, however, she had to leave university to attend to her ailing
mother in Lausanne, Switzerland. There it was decided that Indira would
continue her education at the University of Oxford. After her mother died,
Indira attended the Badminton School in Bristol, England for a short time
period and then enrolled at Somerville College in Oxford in 1937 to study
history. She had to take the entrance examination twice, having failed at her
first attempt with a poor performance in Latin. At Oxford, she excelled in
history, political science, and economics but her grades in Latin—a compulsory
subject—remained poor. However she was active socially at the university and
was a member of the Oxford Majlis Asian Society.
During her time in
Europe, Indira Nehru was plagued with ill health and was constantly attended to
by doctors. She had to make repeated trips to Switzerland to recover,
disrupting her studies. She was there in 1940, when Germany rapidly conquered
Europe. Nehru tried to return to England through Portugal but was left stranded
for nearly two months. She managed to enter England in early 1941 , and from
there returned to India without completing her studies at Oxford. The university
later awarded her an honorary degree. In 2010, Oxford honoured her further by
selecting her as one of the ten Oxasians, illustrious Asian graduates from the
University of Oxford. During her stay in Britain, Nehru frequently met her
future husband Feroze Gandhi (no relation to Mahatma Gandhi). They were married
in Allahabad according to Adi Dharm rituals, although Feroze belonged to a
Zoroastrian Parsi family of Gujarat. The couple had two sons, Rajiv Gandhi
(born 1944) and Sanjay Gandhi (born 1946).
In September 1942, Indira
Gandhi was arrested over her role in the Quit India Movement. She was released
from jail in April 1943. “Mud entered our souls in the drabness of
prison," she later recalled her time in the jail. She added, "When I
came out, it was such a shock to see colors again I thought I would go out of
my mind.”
In the 1950s, Indira, now
Indira Gandhi after her marriage, unofficially served her father as a personal
assistant during his tenure as the first prime minister of India. Near the end
of the 1950s, Gandhi served as the president of the Congress. In that capacity,
she was instrumental in having the communist-led Kerala state government
dismissed in 1959. That government was India's first elected communist
government. After her father's death in 1964 she was appointed a member of the
Rajya Sabha (upper house) and served in Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri's
cabinet as Minister of Information and Broadcasting. In January 1966, after
Shastri's death, the Congress legislative party elected her over Morarji Desai
as their leader. Congress party veteran K. Kamaraj was instrumental in Gandhi achieving
victory. Because she was a woman, other political leaders in India saw Gandhi
as weak and hoped to use her as a puppet once elected: Congress President
Kamaraj orchestrated Mrs. Gandhi's selection as prime minister because he
perceived her to be weak enough that he and the other regional party bosses could
control her, and yet strong enough to beat Desai [her political opponent] in a party
election because of the high regard for her father... a woman would be an ideal
tool for the Syndicate.
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