Dr Rajendra Prasad
(1884-1963) President- Bombay, 1934

On December 3, 1884, in an obscure village in the Saran district of
North Bihar, Rajendra Prasad, whose life was to be an embodiment of the
Gandhian principles was born. He was to Gandhiji, to quote Sarojini Naidu,
what John was to Christ. Jawaharlal called him the symbol of Bharat and
found "truth looking at you through those eyes".
He passed the Entrance examination of the Calcutta University at the
age of eighteen, in 1902, standing first in the first division. At that
time the educational jurisdiction of the Calcutta University extended from
Sadiya, the easternmost frontier of British India, to a little beyond
Peshawar on the North-west. The feat was indeed remarkable. He joined the
Presidency College, Calcutta.
He had been initiated into the cult of 'Swadeshi' by his elder brother,
Mahendra Prasad, even before his arrival in Calcutta. The formation of the
Bihari Students' Conference followed in 1908. It was the first
organisation of its kind in India. It not only led to an awakening, it
nurtured and produced practically the entire political 1eadership of the
twenties in Bihar.
At the time he set himself up as a legal practitioner in Calcutta in
1911, apprenticed to Khan Bahadur Shamsul Huda, he also joined the Indian
National Congress and was elected to the AICC. A year earlier, he
impressed Sir Asutosh Mukherjee so deeply that the latter offered him a
Lectureship in the Presidency Law College. Gopal Krishna Gokhale, one of
the greatest political leaders of India in those days, had met him in
Calcutta a year earlier and had exhorted him to join the Servants of India
Society in Poona, but the pressure of his family held him back and he
started practice in Patna on the establishment of the High Court of Bihar
and Orissa.
In the April 1917 AICC session, held in Calcutta, Gandhiji and Rajendra
Prasad sat very close to each other but he did not know that Gandhiji was
to be taken to his residence in Patna on his way to Champaran. This
meeting with Gandhiji became a turning point in his career. He stayed-with
Gandhiji till his trial was over. Thereafter, things in the country took a
different course, by reason of the Rowlatt Act and the Punjab upheaval,
and, in 1920, even before the civil disobedience and non-cooperation
resolution of the special session of the Congress held in Calcutta in
September had been confirmed by the regular session held in December at
Nagpur he took the plunge. He openly pledged himself to defy unrighteous
laws, and resort to civil disobedience and noncooperation and thus he
constituted himself more or less as an outlaw in the eyes of the British
Government in India.
The decades that followed were years of intense activity and much
suffering. He was the first leading political figure in the Eastern
Provinces to join forces with Gandhiji at a time when the latter was
without a large and effective following. Another such leader from the West
who joined Gandhiji was Vallabhbhai Patel. During the Nagpur Flag
Satyagraha Rajendra Prasad and Vallabhbhai came closer. Rajendra Babu
cherished Sardar's friendship as one of the most pleasant memories of his
life. He often went to Sabarmati and toured the country with Gandhiji. He
suffered several terms of rigorous imprisonment. He was in jail when on
January 15, 1934 the devastating earthquake in Bihar occurred. He was
released two days later. Though ailing, he set himself immediately to the
task of raising funds and organising relief. The Viceroy also raised a
fund for the purpose. While his fund swelled to over 38 lakhs, the
Viceroy's fund, despite his great influence, resources and prestige,
remained at one third of the amount. The way relief was organised left
nothing to be desired. Nationalist India expressed its admiration by
electing him to be the President of the Bombay session of the Indian
National congress.
When the Congress Ministries were formed in 1937, it was the
Parliamentary Board consisting of Sardar Patel, Rajendra Babu and Maulana
Azad, which really and effectively provided guidance and control. In 1939
when Subhas Chandra Bose had to be relieved of the office of the Congress
President, it was Rajendra Prasad who was persuaded to take over the
presidentship and to face the crisis. The Congress faced another crisis
when Acharya Kripalani resigned. Again Rajendra Babu had to step into the
breach. His stewardship of the Constituent Assembly was exemplary.
His elevation to the Presidentship of the Republic in 1950 came as a
matter of course. There were some doubts in some quarters.
Could a person who was temperamentally a peasant, who lived and dressed
like one, impress in an office where ceremonials and gilded trappings
counted? But he was a great success.
As President, he exercised his moderating influence and moulded
policies or actions so silently and unobtrusively. He was an asset to
Jawaharlal Nehru, the Prime Minister. It was in 1960 that he announced his
intention to retire, and though there were many regrets and many tried to
persuade him to continue for a third time, his mind was made up.
Jayaprakash Narayan welcomed the decision, suggesting that his direct
guidance might be available after retirement to the Sarvodaya Movement.
But his illness, severe and protracted, shattered Rajendra Prasad's health
completely. On February 28, 1963, he passed away.
Rajendra Babu shared Gandhiji's great vision, the making of a new man
in a new society. His mind was capable of broad sweeps. But it would take
in at the same time the smallest details.
-Jagjivan Ram
In the name of preventing commercial discrimination against the
British, it is really ensured that the Indian should be discriminated
against in the future as he has been in the past. It must be the
experience of all businessmen who have anything to do with the Government
- and they cannot move an inch without coming across the Government in
some form or another-how at every step they have to face situations which
a Britisher here has not to face. Go to the coal fields. They will tell
you how it is difficult for an Indian colliery to get a railway siding to
his colliery, how it is difficult for him to get wagons and how the Indian
is every day discriminated against in practice. I am not mentioning how it
has been possible for a few British concerns to get leases of practically
the whole area with the best seams of coal and how Indians have to be
content with second and third class collieries and even these they get
with difficulty.
From the Presidential Address - Dr. Rajendra Prasad. I.N.C. Session,
1934, Bombay |