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For more information on Morarji Ranchhodji Desai, visit Britannica.com.
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| Political Biography: Marorji Desai |
(b. Bhadeli 29 Feb. 1896; d. 10 Apr. 1995) Indian; Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance 1967 – 9, Prime Minister 1977 – 9 Son of a schoolteacher, Desai was educated at Wilson College, Bombay where he obtained a B.Sc. in 1916. In 1918 he qualified for the Bombay Civil Service. He resigned from the civil service in 1930 to join M. K. Gandhi's Salt satyagraha. He rose rapidly up the party machine under the patronage of Patel. From 1937 to 1939 he was Minister of Agriculture and Revenue in the Congress ministry in Bombay. Following the Quit India Movement, Desai was jailed for thirty-four months.
After the elections in 1946 Desai rejoined the Bombay Congress ministry and became Home Minister, a position he held for six years. In 1952 he succeed B. G. Kher as Chief Minister of Bombay. Desai held this post until 1956 when he was elevated to Minister for Commerce and Industry (1956 – 8) and for Finance (1958 – 63). Under the Kamaraj plan Desai resigned to work for Congress party organization in Gujarat.
Denied the prime ministership in 1964 and 1966, Desai challenged Mrs Gandhi for the leadership in 1967 and lost. He became Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance but neither was comfortable with each other. In 1969 following the split in Congress he left the government.
Desai joined with the opposition in the campaign against Mrs Gandhi in 1975. During the State of Emergency, he spent eighteen months in jail, much of it in solitary confinement. He was released in January 1977 and became the world's oldest Prime Minister at the age of 81 when the Janata Dal came to power. Desai's main achievement was to dismantle the machinery of Emergency and to restore respect for the constitution. He shelved India's nuclear plans and made visits to Beijing and Moscow as well as hosting a visit by President Jimmy Carter.
Desai was unable to keep the Janata coalition together. The government's declining fortunes were accompanied by caste wars and a police strike. In July 1979, after twenty-seven months in office, Desai resigned and was succeeded by Charan Singh.
Desai retired to Bombay and kept out of politics. In 1989 Pakistan presented him with its highest civilian honour, the Nishan-e-Pakistan in recognition of the "golden and peaceful" period in relations between India and Pakistan while he was Prime Minister.
Desai was an austere individual who kept to a strict personal regime and was a vegetarian and teetotaller all his life as well as practising urine therapy. He was not a popular leader but was highly respected for his political integrity. In retirement he wrote a two-volume autobiography The Story of My Life (1982).
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Morarji Ranchhodji Desai |
| Quotes By: Morarji Desai |
Quotes:
"Life at any time can become difficult: life at any time can become easy. It all depends upon how one adjusts oneself to life."
"It is easy to hate and it is difficult to love. This is how the whole scheme of things works. All good things are difficult to achieve; and bad things are very easy to get."
| Wikipedia: Morarji Desai |
| Morarji Desai | |
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| In office 24 March 1977 – 15 July 1979 |
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| President | Basappa Danappa Jatti and Neelam Sanjiva Reddy |
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| Preceded by | Indira Gandhi |
| Succeeded by | Choudhary Charan Singh |
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| In office 21 August 1967 – 26 March 1970 |
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| Preceded by | T. T. Krishnamachari |
| Succeeded by | Indira Gandhi |
| In office 15 August 1959 – 29 May 1964 |
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| Preceded by | Jawaharlal Nehru |
| Succeeded by | T. T. Krishnamachari |
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| Born | 29 February 1896 Bhadeli, Bombay Presidency, India |
| Died | 10 April 1995 (aged 99) New Delhi, India |
| Political party | Congress (up to 1969), Congress(O) (1969-1977), Janata Party |
| Occupation | Civil servant, Activist |
| Religion | Hindu |
Morarji Ranchhodji Desai (Gujarati: મોરારજી રણછોડજી દેસાઈ) (29 February 1896 – 10 April 1995) was an Indian independence activist and the Prime Minister of India from 1977-79. He was the first Indian Prime Minister who did not belong to the Indian National Congress. He is the only Indian to receive the highest civilian awards from both India and Pakistan, the Bharat Ratna and Nishaan-e-Pakistan.
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Morarji Desai was born into an Anavil Brahmin family in Bhadeli, Valsad in Bombay Presidency (now in Gujarat). After graduating from Wilson College, Mumbai, he joined the civil service in Gujarat. Later, he left the service of the British in 1924 and joined the civil disobedience movement against British rule in India in 1930. He spent many years in jail during the freedom struggle and owing to his sharp leadership skills and tough spirit, he became a favourite amongst freedom-fighters and an important leader of the Indian National Congress in Gujarat. When provincial elections were held in 1934 and 1937, Desai was elected and served as the Revenue Minister and Home Minister of the Bombay Presidency.
Before the independence of India, he became Bombay's Home Minister and later was elected as Chief Minister of Bombay State in 1952. The state was home to Marathi linguistic movements, with calls for the creation of a separate linguistic state. Considered as a tough leader, Desai was also known for pioneering beliefs and enforcing strict discipline and authority and thus possessed a radical mindset. By Desai's orders in 1960, a demonstration by the Samyukta Maharashtra Samiti was fired upon by the police resulting in the deaths of 105 demonstrators. 105 demonstrators were killed in the incident leading to public outrage that shook the central government. The incident led to the formation of the present State of Maharashtra.
As Home Minister, Desai outlawed any portrayals of indecency (which included "kissing" scenes) in films and theatrical productions. Although a staunch Gandhian, Desai was socially conservative, pro-business, and in favour of free enterprise reforms, as opposed to Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru's socialistic policies.
Rising in Congress leadership, Desai was at odds with Prime Minister Nehru and his allies, and with Nehru's age and health failing, he was considered as a possible contender for the position of Prime Minister. Outflanked in the leadership contest after Nehru's death in 1964 by the Nehruvian Lal Bahadur Shastri, Desai remained content to build support within the ranks.
After Shastri's death in 1966, he contested for Prime Minister and fought a closely-contested election with Indira Gandhi. Desai obtained 169 votes but lost to Indira Gandhi who garnered 351.
Initially Desai stayed out of the Cabinet, biding his time. As the young Indira Gandhi's government became embroiled in controversy following a poor harvest, currency devaluation, and rising disenchantment in the country, Desai's influence grew in strength and he returned to the Cabinet in 1967. He demanded the powerful position as the Minister for Home Affairs, but he settled for the Ministry for Finance, with the added title of Deputy Prime Minister. Relations between Desai and the young Prime Minister were strained at best.
In 1969, Indira Gandhi and her allies engineered a major schism in the Congress Party, and her leftist supporters within the Congress Party formed the Congress (R), later to become the Congress (I) Party. Desai and the rest of the Congress establishment cohered to form the Congress (O) Party. But in the General Elections held in 1971, the Congress (O) was drubbed owing to Indira Gandhi's popularity.
In a petition filed by veteran socialist leader Raj Narain, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was convicted in June 1975 of wrongfully using government machinery for election work and corruption, Desai joined Jaya Prakash Narayan and Raj Narain in organising mass protests throughout the country calling for her resignation. In a show of intolerance towards any sort of opposition, Indira Gandhi declared Emergency and had all the opposition leaders including Desai arrested.
When Indira called for elections in January 1977, she lost to Raj Narain from Rae Bareilly, and with many opposition groups, including the Congress (O), joined with longtime rivals, regional parties and blocs of rival ideologies to form the Janata Party. It won 356 seats, close to 2/3 majority, and for the first time since independence, the dominance of the ruling Congress Party was broken. Morarji Desai finally came into office as the Prime Minister when Jaiprakash Narayan picked him as the man most likely to keep the coalition united.
At the time, he was 81 years old but still healthy and vigorous, without any particular ailments.
Desai led a fractious coalition government, and thus failed to achieve much owing to continuous in-wrangling and much controversy. With no party in leadership of the coalition, rival groups vied to unseat Desai. Controversial trials of prominent Congress leaders, including Indira Gandhi over Emergency-era abuses worsened the fortunes of his administration. Desai worked to improve relations with neighbour and arch-rival Pakistan and restored normal relations with China, for the first time since the 1962 war. He communicated with Zia-ul-Haq and established friendly relations and diplomatic relations were also re-established with China. His government undid many amendments made to the constitution during emergency and made it difficult for any future government to impose national emergency.
Since India's first nuclear test in 1974, Desai kept India's nuclear reactors stating "they will never be used for atomic bombs, and I will see to it if I can help it". [1] In 1977, the Carter administration sold India, heavy water and uranium for its nuclear reactors but required American on-site inspection of nuclear materials. Desai declined, seeing the American stance as contradictory, in light of its own nuclear arsenal. [2]
In 1979, Raj Narain and Charan Singh pulled out of the Janata Party, forcing Desai to resign from office and retire from politics at the age of 83. Desai campaigned for Janata Party in 1980 General Election as a senior politician but did not contest the election himself.
In retirement, he lived in Bombay, and died at the age of 99. He had been honoured much in his last years a freedom-fighter of his generation.
Kanti Desai, Morarji Desai's son, was often criticized for being corrupt and using his father's name as an influence. During Desai's retirement, the family was evicted from their apartment in 'Oceanea' Complex in Mumbai by a court order issued by Justice Chandrachud. Sharad Pawar, then Chief Minister of Maharashtra, provided him with permanent Govt Residence in Mumbai until his death.
It's bizarre but true that Morarji Desai is most often remembered for his championing of Urine Therapy. He told journalist Khushwant Singh that he was advised to try drinking his own urine when in his 40s to cure piles (hemorrhoids), and he got immediate results. Thereafter he continued the practice and was quite open about it, saying that you should not do anything you would be ashamed of.
Morarji Desai was a strict follower of Mahatma Gandhi's principles and a moralist.
Morarji Desai had described the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW), India's external intelligence agency, as the praetorian guard of Indira Gandhi and had promised to stop all activities of the R&AW after becoming prime minister. He closed down much of the agency, and reduced its budget and operations. B. Raman, the former head of the Counter-Terrorism Division of R&AW and noted security analyst, reveals that, in an unguarded moment, Morarji Desai indiscreetly told Pakistani President Zia ul-Haq that he was aware of Islamabad's nuclear schemes.[1]
It is understood that Moshe Dayan was sent on a mission to intercede with Morarji Desai for permission to enable Israeli Tanker aircraft to land refuel and take off from an IAF base in Gujrat supporting a mission the Israeli's planned, to destroy Pak Nuclear facilities, then coming up, as they had done at Osirak in Iraq. Dayan was disguised as a Sikh gentleman on a private visit for the purpose. The request was turned down and the mission did not materialize.[citation needed].
Morarji Desai was a true Gandhian follower, social worker, institution builder and a great reformer. He was the Chancellor of Gujarat Vidyapith (university established by Mahatma Gandhi). Even during his term as the Prime Minister he used to visit and stay at Vidyapith during the month of October. He exemplified simplicity and used to write post cards himself even when he held the office of Prime Minister. Sardar Patel deputed him to conduct meetings of farmers in Kaira district which finally led to the establishment of the AMUL Cooperative movement. During his rule, he withdrew intervention in Public Distribution System and rationing shops were literally lost due to cheap sugar and oil available in the market.
Morarji Desai was a practitioner of urine therapy. In 1978 he spoke to Dan Rather on 60 Minutes about urine therapy. Desai stated that urine therapy was the perfect medical solution for the millions of Indians who cannot afford medical treatment. Desai claimed that he drank a pint of his own urine every day.[2]
| Political offices | ||
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| Preceded by Jawaharlal Nehru |
Finance Minister of India 1959–1964 |
Succeeded by T. T. Krishnamachari |
| Preceded by Sachindra Chaudhuri |
Finance Minister of India 1967–1970 |
Succeeded by Indira Gandhi |
| Preceded by Indira Gandhi |
Prime Minister of India 1977–1979 |
Succeeded by Choudhary Charan Singh |
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