Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel
(October
31, 1875 - December 15, 1950)
Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel the iron-man of
India was born on 31st October, 1875, in a small village in Nadiad. His father Jhaberbhai Patel was a simple farmer and
mother Laad Bai was a simple lady. From his childhood itself, Patel was a very hard-working individual. He
used to help his father in farming and studied in a school at Patelaad.
He passed his high-school examination in 1896. Throughout school he was
a very wise and intelligent student. Inspite of poor financial
conditions his father decided to send him to college but Vallabhbhai
refused. Around three years he stayed at home, worked hard and prepared
for the District Leader's examination, hence passing with very good percentage.
Sardar
Vallabhbhai Patel is a historical figure who moves you to tears.
Mostly these are tears of joy, for he achieved a thrilling Indian unity.
Yet some are tears of pity, for the Sardar suffered and sacrificed much.
Sardar Patel hated to work for anyone
especially the Britishers. He was a person of independent nature. He
started his own practice of law in a place called Godhara. Soon the
practice flourished. He saved money, made financial arrangement for the
entire family. He got married to Jhaberaba. In 1904, he got a baby
daughter Maniben, and in 1905 his son Dahya was born. He sent his elder
brother to England for higher studies in law. In 1908, Vittha Bhai
returned as barrister and started practising in Bombay. In 1909 his wife
became seriously ill and was taken to Bombay for treatment VallabhBhai
had to go for the hearing of an urgent case and his wife died. He was
stunned. He admitted his children in St. Mary's school Bombay, and he
left for England. He became a barrister and retuned to India in 1913.
He started his practice in Ahmedabad and soon
he became aware of the local life, activities and people's problems. He
became an extremely popular person and he got elected in the Municipal
Corportaion in 1917. Around 1915, he came across Mahatma Gandhi. The
Swadeshi Movement was at its peak. Gandhiji gave a lecture at a place in
Ahmedabad where Patel heard him and was very impressed and started
actively participating in the freedom movement. The British government's
atrocities were increasing. The government declared to confiscate all
the lands of farmers. He forced the British government to amend the
rules. He brought together the farmers and encouraged them and hence got
the title of 'Sardar' and thus became famous.
The British government considered him as a
threat and his lectures were considered anti-government and he was
imprisoned several times. In 1942, he took part in the Quit India
Movement under the leadership of Mahatma Gandhi. He was arrested along
with other leaders and was sent to Ahmednagar jail. Inspite of the
British Rule, rulers of the small kingdoms were spending a lot of public
money, and were having a nice time. Sardar Vallabh Bhai opposed this.
With great wisdom and political foresight, he
consolidated the small kingdoms. The public was with him. He tackled the
Nizam of Hyderabad and the Nawab of Junagarh who intially did not want
to join India. There were a lot of problems connected with the reunion
of the numerous states into India. Sardar Patel's untiring efforts
towards the unity of the country brought success. Due to the achievement
of this massive task, Sardar Patel got the title of 'Iron Man'. '
He is one of the prestigious leaders of the world who became immmortal
by uniting a scattered nation without any bloodshed. His enthusiasm to work for the independent
nation got a big jolt when Gandhiji was murdered. Patel was very
attached to Gandhiji and considered him, his elder brother and teacher.
He was encouraged by Mahatma Gandhi in all his work. Gandhiji's death
left him broken. On 15th December, 1950 he died of a cardiac arrest. The
news of his death spread all over the world. The entire nation plunged
into deep sorrow, everyday life came to a standstill. A grateful nation
paid a tearful homage to it's beloved leader. In 1991 the grateful
nation conferred upon him the honour of Bharat Ratna.
This man of steel learnt early
to be tough, for he was born as a middle child in a family of
impoverished peasant proprietors. As Vallabhbhai would himself recall,
his parents' hopes seemed centered on the eldest two sons, Soma and
Narsi, and their affection on the youngest two, Kashi and the only
daughter, Dahiba. The ones in the middle, Vallabh and Vithal, were
remembered last when clothes or sweets were to be distributed, and at
once when a chore had to be done. The rough schools he went to as a boy,
and the courts where he defended alleged criminals, also contributed to
Vallabhbhai's mental muscle and stern appearance. Yet this tough man
smiled at the world and at gloomy moments helped others to laugh. Also,
he did not hesitate to step aside for another --for his older brother
Vithal when the latter wanted to use his passport and ticket to London,
and, years later, for Jawaharlal Nehru, when Mahatma Gandhi desired that
Nehru should sit in a chair to which Patel seemed entitled. And this
strong man before whom rajas and maharajas trembled, and to whom rich
men gave large funds for India's national movement, did not allow a
rupee to stick to his fingers, and he saw to it that his children, a son
and a daughter, lived simple lives during and after their father's
lifetime.
His strength of character, the
sharpness of his mind, his organizing skills, and all his energy were
offered up for achieving the freedom of India under Gandhi's leadership,
and after independence for India's consolidation. We admire a man who
rises to a political or financial peak, but are moved by one whose sole
purpose in life is the strength and wellbeing of his compatriots. And we
are moved even more when we discover that next to the steel in his soul
is a tenderness for colleagues and a readiness to accept whatever
results God ordains. In successive phases of his life, Vallabhbhai Patel
showed the defiance of the oppressed, a trial lawyer's brilliance, the
daring to give up a flourishing career, the discipline of a soldier in
freedom's battles, the strategies of a General, indifference as a
prisoner of the Raj, the generosity of the strong, the firmness of a
patriot, and the farsightedness of a statesman. If times are depressing
or daunting, Sardar Patel reminds us of India's and Indians' potential.
When times are good, we can think of him with glad gratitude.