Dinshaw EduIji Wacha
(1844-1936) President - Calcutta, 1901

Dinshaw Edulji Wacha was born in Bombay on August 2, 1844 in a middle
class Parsi family. He worked in close association with Dadabhai Naoroji
and Pherozeshah Mehta in the Congress and was active in both social reform
and educational fields and in political activities. He took a keen and
active interest in the Bombay Municipality, being its member for forty
years. He was a founder - member of the Indian National Congress,
functioned as its Secretary for several years and was elected its
President in 1901. He was the Secretary of the Bombay Presidency
Association for thirty years (1885-1915) before he became its President
(1915-18).
Early in life he displayed his grasp of public finance and economic
issues. Just as he ranks with Pherozeshah Mehta as the maker of the Bombay
Municipal Corporation, so also does he rank with Gopal Krishna Gokhale as
the custodian and watchdog of the country's finance. Moderate though he
was, he greatly embarrassed the Government by his trenchant criticism of
its economic and financial policies. In 1897 he gave "correct and adequate
expression" to the national view before the Welby Commission in London,
pointing out that the financial embarrassment of the Government of India
was caused not by the falling rupee exchange but by the reckless increase
in military and civil expenditure.
The positions he held were many and various. He was Knighted in 1917.
He was a prolific writer and was foremost educating the people and
creating an enlightened public opinion on the political and economic
issues that faced the country. His pen was powerful, often trenchant. No
economic irregularity, no misuse of finance escaped his hawk - like eye
even at an advanced age. He condemned the "homoeopathic dose of Indian
participation in legislation provided by the Morley - Minto and Montford
Reforms.
A great nationalist economic critic and financial wizard, he was
modest, unassuming and unostentatious throughout his long life.
- A.J. Dastur
Leaving aside all other countries, let us take the case of England
alone. How is it that there at least for half-a-century past there is no
such calamity as famine, though the country depends for two-thirds of its
food - supply on foreign nations? Is it not the case that it is the vast
and most satisfactory improvement in the economic condition of the English
labourer and artisan which has banished the sufferings? There might have
been any quantity of food - supply from foreign parts; but so long as
there was the lack of the necessary means to buy that supply, the food for
all intents and purposes might as well be at the bottom of the sea. Now
the one phenomenon, above all others, which was discerned on the surface
in India in reference to the last famine, was the almost total disability
of the masses.
From the Presidential Address - Sir D. E. Wacha I.N.C. Session,
1901, Calcutta |