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Lok Nayak Jayaprakash Narayan, or JP, as he was
fondly called by his followers was born on
October 11, 1902, in Sitabdiara, a village on
the border of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, where the
rivers Ganges and Sarayu meet. His father
Harsudayal worked in the canal department of the
State government and was often touring the
region. There was no high school in the village,
so Jayaprakash was sent to Patna to study in the
Collegiate School.
In Patna, he stayed with relatives at a hostel
called Saraswati Bhavan, which was a meeting
place for students who would normally discuss
the political scene. Nationalism was at its
highest and the people had woken up to the call
of fearless leaders like Bal Gangadhar Tilak and
Aravinda Ghose. Young Jayaprakash became
inspired by their speeches.
Jayaprakash was also fond of reading and
excelled in his studies. He joined the Patna
College on a Government scholarship.
Jayaprakash got married to Prabhavati in October
1920. Prabhavati was the daughter of lawyer and
nationalist Brij Kishore Prasad and was greatly
influenced by Gandhiji's ideology and went to
stay at his ashram while Jayaprakash pursued his
studies.
The Non-cooperation movement launched by
Gandhiji in 1919 was gaining momentum.
Jayaprakash too became involved and was inspired
when he listened to Maulana Abul Kalam Azad
speech. Maulana was a great orator and his call
to give up English education had a deep impact
on Jayaprakash and he left Patna College with
just 20 days remaining for his examinations. He
joined the Bihar Vidyapeeth, a college run by
the Congress.
The
movement was withdrawn after it turned violent
at Chauri Chaura in UP. The disappointed
students returned to college. The Vidyapeeth had
no more courses to offer. So Jayaprakash decided
to go to America to pursue his studies.
Meanwhile Prabhavati remained at Sabarmati in
Gandhi's ashram.
Jayaprakash faced many hardships in America. He
was forced to shift to different universities as
he did not have enough financial resources to
cope with the increasing fees. He did odd jobs
like picking grapes, packing fruits at a canning
factory, washing dishes, a mechanic at a garage
etc. to pay for his education.
He
pursued Sociology and his paper, "Social
Variation", was declared the best of the year.
In Wisconsin, Jayaprakash was exposed to the
theory of communism as laid out in Karl Marx's
book "Das Capital" and was much influenced by
Marxism. However, Jayaprakash had to cut his
doctorate short when news came that his mother
was seriously ill and returned to India in
November 1929.
While Jayaprakash became a believer in
Communism, Prabhavati became an ardent Gandhian.
In 1929, Jayaprakash joined the Congress upon
Jawaharlal Nehru's invitation. For Jayaprakash
it was not enough that the nation attain
political freedom. To him, the definition of
freedom was freedom from hunger, poverty and
ignorance.
When most of the top Congress leaders were
arrested after the Dandi March in 1930,
Jayaprakash set up underground offices all over
the nation and organized secret meetings to
continue the work of the Congress. After an
underground meeting of the Congress Working
Committee in Banaras, Jayaprakash was arrested.
He was released from jail in 1933.
Soon after his release in 1933, Jayaprakash
formed the Congress Socialist Party, functioning
as the social wing of the Congress party and
promoting the ideas of socialism.
Jayaprakash was arrested several times for his
activities to overthrow the British. He even
organised a guerrilla army called the "Azad
Dasta" after escaping to Nepal from prison.
However the British were able to take him in
when he was on his way to Rawalpindi and was
taken to Lahore Fort where he was subjected to
16 months of mental and physical torture and was
put in solitary confinement. Finally,
Jayaprakash was released from jail on April 12,
1946.
Independence finally came on August 15, 1947.
Within a year Gandhiji was assassinated.
Prabhavati hid her sorrow behind the spinning
wheel, but Jayaprakash's mind "churned with
grief and horror." He began to see the wisdom in
Gandhiji's insistence on truth and non-violence.
The
1952 elections saw the Socialists lose to
Congress. Nehru invited Jayaprakash to join the
Cabinet. However, Nehru could give no assurances
on the implementation of Jayaprakash's 14 point
plan to reform the Constitution, the
Administration and Judicial system, nationalize
the banks, redistribute land to the landless,
revive Swadeshi, and set-up cooperatives,
Jayaprakash refused the offer.
Jayaprakash fought for the rights of trade
unions and was able to get a minimum wage,
pension, medical relief and housing subsidy
introduced. At the same time, Jayaprakash was
keenly watching events in Russia. The bloody
purges and imprisonment convinced Jayaprakash
that communism was not for India. On April 19,
1954, at a meeting in Gaya, Jayaprakash made the
dramatic announcement of dedicating his life to
Vinoba Bhave's Sarvodaya movement. He set up an
ashram at Hazaribagh, a poor and backward
village.
Jayaprakash blended Gandhian-philosophy and
modern Western democracy. His book, "The
Reconstruction of Indian Polity," won him the
Ramon Magsaysay Award.
In
1971, Jayaprakash set out to find out and
alleviate the problems of the Naxalites and was
also a key person in acquiring the surrender of
dacoits in the Chambal Valley.
1974 ushered in a year of high inflation,
unemployment and lack of supplies and essential
commodities. So on April 8, 1974, at the age of
72, he led a silent procession in protest, at
Patna. The procession was lathi charged. On June
5, 1974, Jayaprakash, while addressing a big
crowd at Gandhi Maidan in Patna declared, "This
is a revolution, friends! We are not here merely
to see the Vidhan Sabha dissolved. That is only
one milestone on our journey. But we have a long
way to go... After 27 years of freedom, people
of this country are wracked by hunger, rising
prices, corruption... oppressed by every kind of
injustice... it is a Total Revolution we want,
nothing less!"
On
June 12, 1975, the Allahabad High Court held the
Prime Minister, Mrs. Indira Gandhi, guilty on
charge of corrupt practices in the election.
Jayaprakash asked Mrs. Gandhi to resign until
the Supreme Court cleared her name. However, she
declared Emergency. Jayaprakash was arrested and
sent to Chandigarh where he was kept prisoner in
a hospital, sick and old.
Finally in January 1977, Emergency was lifted.
Fresh elections were declared. Under
Jayaprakash's guidance several parties united to
form the Janata Party. The party incorporated
all of Jayaprakash's goals in its manifesto and
came to power. As his health worsened,
Jayaprakash was but a mute witness to the
collapse of the Janata Party.
Jayaprakash breathed his last on October 8, 1979
leaving the nation bereft of one of its greatest
leaders. He will always be fondly remembered as
"Lok Nayak" or leader of the people. |