Pandit Bishan Narayan Dar
(1864-1916) President- Calcutta, 1911

Pandit Bishan Narayan Dar, one of the most prominent nationalist leaden
in the early phase of the Indian National Congress, was born at Barabanki
(U.P.) in 1864. He started his education in the traditional way of North
Indian aristocracy, with Urdu and Persian. He had his College education at
Lucknow. Then he went to England where he studied Law and was called to
the Bar. On his return in 1887 he started his practice as a barrister in
Oudh. His interest in public affairs and the welfare of his country,
however, did not allow him to remain content with a successful
professional career. He was drawn into politics in 1892 and remained a
most active figure in the national movement till his death in 1916.
It was in 1892 that Bishan Narayan Dar first attended the Indian
National Congress, and from that time on he was a regular participant in
the Congress sessions. He was one of the most eloquent speakers at the
Congress. In 1911 he presided over the Calcutta Session of the Congress
and his Presidential address was one of the best in the history of the
Congress.
He was also a prominent figure in the U.P. Political Conference. As a
member of the Imperial Legislative Council for several years in the
beginning of the 20th century, he boldly advocated the nationalist cause
and criticised governmental policies and measures.
His political ideas were best reflected in the speeches he delivered at
the Congress sessions and in the Imperial Legislative Council, and also in
his numerous writings. Speaking of the reform of the Legislative Councils
at the 1890 session of the Congress, he opposed the idea of special
minority representation. "The Legislative Council is a body where national
interests ought to be represented and where all sectarian interests and
class bias should be excluded. The object of a National Assembly is only
to discuss those matters which are common to the whole Indian Nation. On
principle, therefore, I object to any clause for the representation of
minorities".
Again in his Presidential address at the 1911 session of the Congress,
he said, "Sectarian political organisations are always objectionable, and
nowhere more so than in India, where racial, religious and social
prejudices are apt to enter into their composition and pervert the real
aim for which they are started".
Like other nationalists of his day, Bishan Narayan Dar had also faith
in the British sense of justice. But at the same time he was a vehement
critic of governmental policies and measures. He was in favour of the
Indianisation of the bureaucracy, and wanted simultaneous Civil Service
examinations in England and India.
In 1893 when the cow-killing riots took place in Azaimgarh (U.P.) which
led to a wholesale persecution of the Hindus, Bishan, Narayan Dar took up
the cause of the persecuted Hindus and fought on their behalf in the law
courts and in the press. In this Azamgarh pamphlet he criticised the
Government officials in their dealing with the situation. It created a
sensation all over the country.
He was a prolific writer. His article in the Leader, entitled 'Present
Political Situation', published in March 1910, provoked the Government to
take action against the editor and the publisher.
Bishan Narayan Dar held very liberal views on religion and social
reforms. The Kashmiri Pandit community had declared him an outcast for
going to England and demanded a Prayaschit on his return in 1887. He
boldly refused, and ultimately succeeded in breaking the old Dharma Sabha
and in forming, with the help of the progressive elements, a new
organisation which came to be known as Bishan Sabha.
- Akhilesh Misra
So far as it rests with Indians to discharge that great duty, it is
done by the Congress by its humble but earnest endeavours. For the last 26
years it has been telling the people what they owe to the British
Government, and the British Government what it might do to make its rule
even more beneficent than it is. But by a strange perversity of fate this
organisation - national in its composition and loyal and patriotic in its
aims - has been maligned, misrepresented, abused and ridiculed.
From the Presidential Address - Bishan Narayan Dar I.N.C. Session,
1911, Calcutta. |